Sin Agog A
Sin Agog A
Sin Agog A
SECOND EDITION
THE ANCIENT
SYNAGOGUE
T h e F i r s t T h o u s a n d Ye a r s
LEE I. LEVINE
YA L E U N I V E R S I T Y P R E S S /
N E W H AV E N & L O N D O N
Published with the assistance of the Ronald and Betty Miller Turner Publication Fund and the Lucius N. Littauer Foundation. Copyright 2005 by Yale University. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers. Set in Janson type by Tseng Information Systems, Inc. Printed in the United States of America by Edwards Brothers, Ann Arbor, Michigan. The Library of Congress has catalogued the rst edition as follows: Levine, Lee I. The ancient synagogue : the rst thousand years / Lee I. Levine. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 0-300-07475-1 (alk. paper) 1. SynagoguesHistoryTo 1500. 2. JudaismHistoryPost-exilic period, 586 b.c.210 a.d. 3. JudaismHistory Talmudic period, 10425. I. Title. bm653.l38 1999 296.6'5'0901dc21 98-52667 cip
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
Preface to the Second Edition Preface to the First Edition Chronolog y one Introduction Sources and Methodology History of Research
ix xi xv 1
two Origins State of Research The City-Gate as Synagogue Forerunner The Emergence of the Synagogue in the Second Temple Period Between City-Gate and Synagogue Concluding Remarks three Pre- 70 Judaea Galilee: some methodological considerations / nazareth / capernaum / tiberias / gamla Jerusalem Judaean Desert: masada /
21
45
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herodium / qumran The Coastal and Shephelah Regions: dor / caesarea / qiryat sefer / modiin (khirbet umm el-umdan) Other Proposed Sites The Judaean Synagogue in Perspective
four The Pre- 70 Diaspora Egypt: epigraphical and papyrological evidence / philo / a rabbinic tradition Berenice (Cyrene) Italy: ostia / rome Delos Asia Minor and Greece: josephus / new testament / the acmonia inscription The Kingdom of Bosphorus Syria The Diaspora Synagogue in Perspective f i v e The S e c o n d Te m p l e S y n a g o g u e Its Role and Functions The Synagogue as a Community Center The Synagogue as a Religious Institution: torah reading / reading from the prophets (haftarah) / study and instruction / sermons / targumim / communal prayer The First-Century Synagogue in Historical Perspective
LATE ANTIQUITY
81
135
si x L ate Roman Palestine ( 7 0 Fo u r t h C e n t u r y C . E . ) Sources and Methodology: rabbinic materialabundance and scarcity / post-70 synagogues: the archaeological evidence? / synagogue building in the mid third century Continuity and Change Synagogues in Roman PalestineFurther Observations seve n Byzantine Palestine Diversity within Commonality Figural Art in Historical Perspective Jewish Motifs in the Byzantine-Christian Context The Synagogues Enhanced Religious Dimension The Impact of Christianity Concluding Remarks eight Diaspora S ynagogues Archaeological Sites: dura europos / gerasa / apamea / sardis / priene / aegina / plovdiv / stobi / ostia / bova marina / naro ( ammam-lif) / elche Synagogues of Rome Babylonian Synagogues The Centrality of the Diaspora Synagogue Between Unity and Diversity Religious Leadership Synagogues in the Diaspora and PalestineSimilarities and Dierences Some Concluding Thoughts
174
210
250
contents
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381
412
454
466
499
519
sixteen Liturg y 530 Methodological Considerations The Second Century: torah reading / the amidah / the shema liturgy / other liturgical developments /
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rabbinic liturgy and the second-century synagogue / early christian and rabbinic liturgies Late Antiquity: the third century / differences between palestine and babylonia / prayer / qedushah / archaeological evidence for prayer / the torah reading and its accompanying activities / piyyut Beyond Late Antiquity
seventeen Iconog raph y: The L imits of Interpretation 593 Methodological Considerations Comparisons with Christian Art The Use and Abuse of Literary Sources Limitations in the Interpretation of Jewish Art: menorah / helios and the zodiac signs / programmatic explanations Concluding Perspectives eighteen Diachronic and Synchronic Dimensions The Synagogue in Context Architectural Evidence Art Communal Center Inscriptions Liturgy Sanctity Degrees of Hellenization Unique Jewish Components Conclusions nineteen Epilogue Glossary List of Abbreviations Bibliog raph y Illust ration Credits Source Index Subject Index
613
ale University Press has graciously agreed to republish The Ancient Synagogue in a revised, paperback edition. Such a revision has become a desideratum owing to the deluge of synagogue-related material that has been published since the submission of my original manuscript to the Press in 1998. Over the past six years, studies addressing every conceivable aspect of the ancient synagogue have appeared, ranging from excavation reports and monographs to articles in edited volumes and a plethora of journals. Thus, updating the original volume is appropriate, as is the decision to publish a paperback edition that will be accessible to a wider audience. This has also aorded the opportunity to reformulate and rene some of my analyses as well as to correct mistakes that inadvertently appeared in the rst edition. I welcome this opportunity to acknowledge my appreciation to Yale University Press, and especially to its editorial director, Jonathan Brent, for agreeing to undertake this project.
his volume is the fruit of years of teaching and research connected with the ancient synagogue. It was only after living in Israel for several years and seeing rsthand the steady stream of archeological discoveries associated with this institutionthe buildings as well as their artistic and epigraphical remainsthat this subject rst engaged my attention. The opportunity to share this fascinating material with students further stimulated my interest and curiosity. This led to the editing of several volumes on the subject in the 1980s, Ancient Synagogues Revealed and The Synagogue in Late Antiquitythe former a series of articles presenting the latest ndings of archeological excavations of synagogues, the latter a collection of the papers delivered at an international conference sponsored by the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York. Since then, I have published a number of articles on a range of topics dealing with various aspects of the ancient synagogue. The subject matter in this volume has been organized both diachronically and synchronically. The primary division is chronological, with the destruction of the Temple in the year 70 serving as a watershed. The reason for this division is twofold. First, the presence of the Temple and its subsequent destruction were powerful factors in shaping the religious role of the synagogue. As long as the Temple existed, no institution could compete with its prominence, sanctity, or religious authenticity. The Temple was the Jewish religious institution par excellence, and its demise created a vacuum in Jewish life, which was lled in large part by the synagogue.
xii
A second factor in choosing the year 70 as a watershed is related to the disparate nature of the sources at our disposal before and after that year. The literary sources change dramatically, and the quality and quantity of the archeological and epigraphical material for late antiquity far exceeds that which was available earlier. Following the Introduction and a chapter on the origins of the synagogue, we shall focus on the synagogues of Judaea and the Diaspora, and then on the role of these synagogues in Jewish society in the rst century c.e. Such an arrangement allows for the initial presentation and analysis of the relevant data, followed by a synthesis of the material and a discussion of a variety of issues relating to the functioning of the synagogue in the late Second Temple period. The remainder of the book is devoted to the post-70 era. After a series of chapters on the synagogues development in late antique Palestine and the Diaspora, our attention focuses on the synagogue as an institutionthe physical dimension of the building, its communal aspects, and its leadership, as well as a number of specic groups within Jewish society that played a signicant role in this institution: the Patriarchs, the rabbis, women, and priests. A chapter is devoted to the liturgical developments within the synagogue, an aspect richly addressed by rabbinic and other material. There I describe how the Jewish worship context evolved in late antiquity until it reached a form quite similar to that which exists in most liturgical contexts today. Another chapter deals with the interpretation of Jewish art and examines what can and cannot be ascertained given the evidence available, and a nal chapter discusses the internal and external (i.e., diachronic and synchronic) forces that shaped the synagogue of late antiquity. A few words regarding the use of this book are in order. Owing to its size, an attempt has been made to keep footnotes as unencumbered as possible. Therefore, shortened references have been used throughout, with full bibliographical details appearing at the end of the volume. Translations of verses from the Old Testament are taken from The Holy Scriptures According to the Masoretic Text of the Jewish Publication Society of America (Philadelphia, 1917); a number of emendations have been made in the translations at the discretion of the author. Translations of verses from the New Testament follow the Revised Standard Version (RSV). Page references to critical editions appear in a designated section of the bibliography. On rare occasions, several editions of a single work are cited. For example, Liebermans edition is used when citing the rst four sedarim of the Tosefta, and Zuckermandels edition for the last two. However, when no pagination appears, the standard uncritical edition is being cited. When relevant information appears in the printed, and not the critical, edition, the former is cited without a page reference. At times I have cited an older critical edition rather than a newer one, in which case the name of the edition is cited as well (e.g., for Tanuma or Pesiqta de Rav Kahana). Translations of Greek and Latin sources have been taken from the Loeb Classical Library unless otherwise indicated. In citing collections of epigraphical material, reference is made to the inscription number (no.) in a given corpus; whenever a number appears alone (not preceded by p.), the reference is to a page in that edition.
xiii
Several of the chapters in this book have appeared as articles, although each has undergone extensive revision and expansion. Chapter 9, on the synagogues physical dimension, originally appeared in the Hebrew journal Cathedra in 1990, while Chapter 13, a study of the relationship between the sages and the synagogue, was originally published in The Galilee in Late Antiquity in 1992. Chapter 2, on the origins of the synagogue, is a revision of an article that appeared in the Journal of Biblical Literature in 1996. All appear here with the permission of the publishers. Since I began working on this volume several years ago, I have enjoyed the support of several institutions and academic frameworks. The Rockefeller Foundation made it possible for me to spend six weeks at its magnicent academic center in Bellagio, Italy. My sabbatical stay at Yale University and the Jewish Theological Seminary, along with grants from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture, aorded me further opportunities to make substantial progress in my research. I also have beneted immensely from the comments and suggestions of many colleagues who were kind enough to read parts of the manuscript: Professors G. Blidstein, S. Fine, G. Foerster, I. Gafni, R. Jacoby, R. Kalmin, S. Reif, A. Shinan, P. van der Horst, B. Visotzky, and Z. Weiss. My thanks are also due to a number of graduate students who helped in the nal stages of the research: Jill Borodin, Joshua Kulp, and Jennifer Tobenstein. I am indebted to ani Davis for her superb editing skills and meticulous reading of the manuscript in its many versions. Her insights and suggestions are found throughout this book. Finally, I thank Charles Grench, Mary Pasti, and the sta of Yale University Press for the professional and supportive attention given to every phase of this books production.
CHRONOLOGY
1000586 b.c.e. ca. 950 621 586 586536 53870 (c.e.) 538332 536 516 458 444 33263 332 301 ca. 200 175 167 164 14063 63
First Temple period Building of the First Temple by Solomon King Josiahs reforms Destruction of the First Temple Exilic period Second Temple period Restoration period First wave of returnees from Babylonian exile Completion of the Second Temple Ezra arrives in Jerusalem Nehemiah arrives in Jerusalem; public reading of the Torah Hellenistic period Alexander the Great conquers Judaea Judaea under Ptolemaic rule Judaea under Seleucid rule Hellenistic reforms in Jerusalem Antiochus persecutions in Judaea Maccabean purication of the Temple Hasmonean era Pompey conquers Judaea
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chronology
374 6 c.e. 2636 40 6674 6996 70 74 ca. 70225 70132 ca. 7080 ca. 90120 132135 ca. 140180 ca. 180225 193235 ca. 200220 ca. 220400 ca. 220500 279 306337 324 ca. 326 351 361363 379395 438 614 638 Herods reign Judaea incorporated into Roman provincial system Pontius Pilate in Judaea Caligulas attempt to place his statue in the Jerusalem Temple First revolt against Rome Flavian dynasty Destruction of the Second Temple Conquest of Masada Tannaitic age Yavnean era Era of Yoanan ben Zakkai in Yavneh Era of Rabban Gamaliel II in Yavneh Second revolt against Rome (Bar-Kokhba revolt) Ushan era Era of R. Judah I Severan era Codication of the Mishnah Amoraic period (Palestine) Amoraic period (Babylonia) Death of R. Yoanan bar Napa, the leading Palestinian amora Reign of Constantine I Christianity recognized as ocial religion of the Roman Empire Discovery of the cross and Golgotha Gallus revolt Reign of Julian Reign of Theodosius I Publication of the Theodosian (II) Code Persian conquest of Palestine Arab conquest of Jerusalem
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INTRODUCTION
he synagogue, one of the unique and innovative institutions of antiquity, was central to Judaism and left indelible marks on Christianity and Islam as well.1 As the Jewish public space par excellence, the synagogue building was always the largest and most monumental in any given Jewish community and was often located in the center of the town or village. In the Hellenistic and early Roman periods, the term synagogue () was used to refer to the community, its central building, or both. Luke uses the term to denote both meanings in the same chapter (Acts 13:14, 43), as do the Jews of Berenice in one of their inscriptions. In Asia Minor, Rome, and Judaea, synagogue referred to a building, but in a number of inscriptions from Bosphorus, the community was clearly intended. In Bosphorus, Egypt, and Delos, the word proseuche [, house of worship] referred to the building. The term synagogue will be used in this volume to refer to the communal framework that evolved sometime in the Second Temple period and constituted the focus of Jewish life in Late Antiquity. It is entirely possible that some communities initially met on premises other than a synagogue building or called their central institution by another name. By the second century c.e., however, synagogue had become a universal term for the building in which communal activities were held.2
1. See, for example, Krinsky, Synagogues of Europe, 1520. 2. Scholars have long discussed the dierences between these two terms, synagoge and proseuche. While
introduction
In comparison to the Jerusalem Temple, which it came to replace as the central religious institution in Jewish life, the synagogue was revolutionary in four major areas.3 Location. The synagogue was universal in nature. Not conned to any one site, as was the ocial sacricial ritual of the post-Josianic era, the synagogue enabled Jews to organize their communal life and worship anywhere. Leadership. The functionaries of the synagogue were not restricted to a single caste or socioreligious group. In principle, anyone could head the institution. Priests may have played a central role in its religious aairs as well, owing to their knowledge and experience in liturgical matters and not necessarily because of their priestly lineage per se. Synagogue leadership wasin theory, at leastopen and democratic (in certain functions and places, regarding women as wellsee Chap. 14). Participation. In addition to the communal dimension, the congregation was directly involved in all aspects of synagogue ritual, be it scriptural readings or prayer service. This stands in sharp contrast to the Jerusalem Temple setting, where people entering the sacred precincts remained passive and might never have even witnessed the sacricial proceedings personally unless they themselves were oering a sacrice. In many cases, visitors to the Temple remained in the Womens Court without being able to view what was transpiring in the inner Israelite or Priestly Courts.4 Moreover, non-Jews were explicitly banned from the Temple precincts under penalty of death (warning inscriptions were set up around the sacred precincts), whereas the synagogue was open to all; in many places, particularly in the Diaspora, non-Jews attended the synagogue regularly and in signicant numbers. Worship. Perhaps the most distinct aspect of the synagogue was that it provided a context in which a dierent form of worship other than that of the Jerusalem Temple developed. Over the course of Late Antiquity, the synagogue came to embrace a wide range of religious activities, including scriptural readings, communal prayers, hymns, targum, sermons, and piyyut. Instead of the silence that characterized the Temples sacricial cult, the synagogue placed a premium on public recitationcommunal prayer, as well as the reading, translation, and exposition of sacred texts.
some have assumed that they refer to two very dierent institutions (e.g., Gutmann, Synagogue Origins, 3; Runesson, Origins, 42976), most assume, correctly in my opinion, that these terms refer to one and the same institution, each highlighting a dierent dimension (e.g., Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 2754; Httenmeister, Synagoge und Proseuche, 16381). Neither of these terms was uniquely Jewish, as both were borrowed from pagan culture. In the course of time, however, and certainly by the rst century c.e., they had become largely associated with the Jewish community. 3. On the uniqueness of the synagogue as a religious institution, see Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 188; Heinemann, Prayer, 1319; S. Safrai, Synagogue, 9089; Fleischer, On the Beginnings of Obligatory Jewish Prayer, 400401; L. I. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 7. 4. Pagan temples sometimes barred people from entering; at times they were open to all; see Stambaugh, Functions of Roman Temples, 571; MacMullen, Paganism, 44.
introduction
The centrality of the text in the synagogues liturgical agenda was indeed revolutionary; the communal reading and study of the Bible made this institution, from its inception, radically dierent from other Jewish religious frameworks of antiquity. The Jerusalem Temple, the temples of Elephantine and Leontopolis, and the public liturgy of Qumran all had entirely dierent foci. In fact, the synagogue was likewise unique vis--vis contemporary pagan religious contexts, wherein hymns, prayers, and recitations formed the primary nonsacricial liturgy. However, the primary importance of the synagogue, as a whole, throughout antiquity lay in its role as a community center. By the rst century c.e., the synagogue had become the dominant institution on the local Jewish scene in both the Diaspora and Judaea, with, of course, the sole exception of pre-70 Jerusalem. No other communal institution that might conceivably have competed with the synagogue for communal prominence is ever mentioned in our sources. Within the connes of the synagogue the Jewish community not only worshipped, but also studied, held court, administered punishment, organized sacred meals, collected charitable donations, housed the communal archives and library, and assembled for political and social purposes. As a communal institution, the synagogue was fundamentally controlled and operated by the local community. Running such an institution may have been the concern either of the community as a whole, as was most likely the case in villages and towns, or primarily of the local urban aristocracy, which often assumed responsibility for the building and maintenance of such structures.5 In contrast to pagan temples and Christian churches, for which architectural and organizational models used throughout the Roman and Byzantine Empires were often the norm, synagogues were generally locally based and autonomous. As a result, we see a broad range of styles and practices associated with this institution throughout antiquity. This varietyfrom architectural patterns, artistic expressions, and inscriptions to prayer, Torah reading, sermons, targum, and piyyutcharacterized the synagogue of antiquity, constituting what Peter Brown has called in another context an exuberant diversity. 6 The extent of this diversity has become abundantly clear over the past generation or two with the dramatic increase in archaeological material and greater sophistication in the analysis and evaluation of our literary sources. As a result, we are aware of striking regional dierences even within Roman-Byzantine Palestine, not to speak of the far-ung Diaspora. In several cases we have become aware of very dierent types of synagogues even within a given city. Nevertheless, despite this diversity, the institution exhibited a remarkable uniformity. Its basic role as a community center and the range of activities and religious functions conducted therein, as well as its orientation, ornamentation, symbolism, and sanctity,
5. Baron, Jewish Community, I, 5354, 13441. See below, Chap. 10. 6. Brown, Art and Society, 18.
introduction
were, in varying degrees, common to synagogues throughout antiquity. These shared characteristics are evident in both archaeological and literary sources. The synagogue evolved signicantly throughout the course of antiquity. Its communal dimension continued to remain central between the rst and seventh centuries c.e. yet, as noted, the religious component of the institution changed dramatically in scope and prominence. The synagogue did not emerge at rst as a quintessentially religious institution, although some dimension of religious activity was undoubtedly present from the outset. Only in Late Antiquity (from the secondthird centuries c.e. onward) did the religious component develop and expand to become the decisive feature of the synagogue. The synagogue was thus transformed from a community center with a religious component into a house of worship that included an array of communal activities. This transformation is most strikingly attested by the synagogues of ancient Palestine, and, despite the relative paucity of evidence, such developments can be detected in the Diaspora as well. The synagogue had become a miqdash meat ( ,) a lesser or diminished sanctuary.7 In some respects the synagogue came to replace the Temple. Whereas the latter had served as the main focus of Jewish religious life throughout the Second Temple period, after the destruction in 70 c.e. many of its customs and prerogatives were gradually assumed by the synagogue. The impetus for these changes came from several quarters. Certainly, internal Jewish developments, rst and foremost among which was the destruction of the Temple, played a signicant role. No less important, however, were the evolving Empire-wide social and religious contexts in which the synagogue operated. Greco-Roman inuences were clearly in evidence in many physical aspects of the synagogue, as were Christian models by Late Antiquity. With regard to the church, an ironic reversal took place between the rst and seventh centuries c.e. Whereas nascent Christianity drew heavily on religious and liturgical elements derived from contemporary Second Temple Jewish life, this trend was largely reversed after the ascendancy and dominance of the church in the Byzantine period, as Jewish life generally, and the synagogue in particular, began absorbing elements of contemporary Christian practice. More than any other Jewish institution of antiquity, the synagogue demonstrates a fascinating synthesis of Jewish and non-Jewish elements within a single framework. While some features of the synagogue reect earlier Jewish customs and beliefs, others, just noted, derive from the surrounding pagan and later Christian worlds. The integration of these elements in every aspect of the institutionfrom the physical dimension of art and architecture to the spiritual dimension of liturgyoers a glimpse into the diverse and dynamic nature of Jewish life at the time, socially, religiously, and culturally. As we shall see, the Jewish response to these stimuli was far from monolithic; while many ele7. B Megillah 29a; on this source, see below, Chap. 6.
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ments were adopted or adapted, others were ignored. Furthermore, whatever reactions there were might change markedly from one community to the next. The various ways these external models were combined with practices identied at the time as Jewish are intriguing. Often they coexisted with no apparent tension, and we can only speculate as to how a community might have understood such a synthesis. For example, the zodiac motif, depicting the four seasons and the sun god Helios, riding in his chariot, is invariably found on the mosaic oors of synagogues alongside panels depicting distinctively Jewish symbols, such as the Torah shrine, menorah, lulav, and shofar. In the recently discovered synagogue at Sepphoris, biblical scenes and Tabernacle/Templerelated items are featured together with the zodiac pattern. Clearly, many Jewish communities integrated non-Jewish models into their synagogue framework without feeling threatened or compromised in any way. Because of its centrality and importance in the community, the synagogue played an integrative role in ancient Jewish society. The inclusiveness of its activities, ranging from social to religious and from political to educational, underscores this fact. An impressive array of religious forms found expression within its walls, some of older Second Temple period vintage (scriptural readings, sermons, and targumim), some of post-70 origin (communal prayer, piyyut, and religious art). Moreover, all segments of the community came within the purview of the synagogue in one way or anotherthe common folk of both genders and all ages, village and town leaders, the wealthy urban aristocracy, various economic and social associations, the Patriarchate and those associated with that oce, the rabbis, and other religious gures within the community. The study of the synagogue has far-reaching implications in addition to tracing the important role of this institution in Jewish society. Given its centrality, there is much to learn about the communities per se via this institution: How did the communities dene themselves? What was the nature of their leadership? What were their religious and cultural agendas? What was their relationship to the pagan and Christian surroundings, as well as to the Roman and Byzantine authorities (both secular and religious)? In light of the growing wealth of information regarding the ancient synagogue, many conceptions regarding Jewish history of Late Antiquity have undergone serious revision. The location of synagogue remains, for example, has aorded a much fuller picture of Jewish settlement in Byzantine Palestine than was heretofore known. At times, these remains have conrmed much of what we know from other sources, i.e., that the post-70 Jewish settlement was concentrated in the Galilee in particular, as well as in the large coastal cities of the country. In other cases, however, archaeological nds have supplemented extant literary sources by indicating that Jewish settlement also ourished in other areas, e.g., the eastern, southern, and western peripheries of Judaea and in the Golan, areas that have been largely ignored in literary sources. Moreover, our assessment of the sociological, political, and cultural dimensions of
introduction
Jewish life in Late Antiquity has been totally transformed by the cumulative nds relating to the ancient synagogue. Until recently it was almost universally assumed, in the historiographical tradition reaching back to the nineteenth century, that the Jewish communities of Late Antiquity suered ever-increasing persecution and discrimination and that, as a result, these communities, particularly those in Byzantine Palestine, were severely reduced in status and diminished in size. On the basis of the data now available, this picture must be seriously revised. Synagogues, in fact, were to be found the length and breadth of Byzantine Palestine; some were built anew; others underwent periodic renovation. Jewish cultural activityfar from being stiedcontinued to ourish throughout these centuries: artistic expression was extensive, synagogue prayer and poetry were rened and expanded, sermonic and targumic materials were compiled and edited, new halakhic and liturgical forms were created, new types of apocalyptic literature were written, and new forms of synagogue poetry, magic, and mystical experiences crystallized. A similar reevaluation has taken place with regard to the Diaspora. The picture of these far-ung communities as suering legal discrimination, church hostility, and occasional persecution now has to be balanced by evidence of toleration, stability, prosperity, and even of Judaisms continued appeal to non-Jews. Both literary and archaeological data oer evidence of this more positive dimension. The attraction of Judaism for Antiochan Christians, the participation of non-Jews in the communal activities of the Aphrodisian Jewish community, and the centrality and prominence of many synagogue buildings in their respective urban settings (rst and foremost Sardis, but not exclusively) make it crystal clear that Diaspora Jewry, at least in part, continued to ourish throughout Late Antiquity. Synagogue studies have also opened up new vistas regarding our understanding of the nature of Judaism throughout Late Antiquity. It was once assumed (and, as it turns out, quite gratuitously) that the synagogue and Jewish religious life generally followed rabbinic dictates: what the rabbis legislated, the community then adopted. Reality, however, appears to have been far more complex. Synagogue remains oer a variety of cultural, artistic, and religious expressions, some of which appear far from compatible with rabbinic dicta. It is indisputable that the rabbis were a signicant factor in Jewish society by the end of Late Antiquity; whether they wielded denitive authority or a normative inuence in communal aairs, even in religious matters, does not appear to have been the case very often. Only now are we beginning to recognize the many dierent cultural and religious currents at play in Jewish society at the time that helped to create the rich mosaic of beliefs and practices we know today.
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logical materials abound, both in absolute terms and in comparison to other Jewish institutions in antiquity, our understanding of the synagogue is hampered by the diverse types of sources available, by their varying foci, and by the resultant discontinuity of information from one locale to another and from one period to the next. For example, our knowledge of Diaspora synagogues in the pre-70 era rests in large part on literary remains (the New Testament, Philo, and Josephus), but for Late Antiquity (Babylonia excepted) the evidence is drawn almost exclusively from archaeological material. Thus, the discrepancy in the sources available for the two periods is sharp and almost irreconcilable. The issue of continuity is only slightly improved with respect to Roman Palestine. The limited amount of sources for the pre-70 period is compensated by an abundance of material from the late Roman and Byzantine eras. Both rabbinic sources and archaeological data oer a relatively detailed picture of the synagogue in its Late Antique Palestinian setting. The former is a particularly rich source in this regard, although utilizing these sources presents a plethora of methodological challenges. In addition to the usual issues relating to the reliability of textual traditions and attributions, the late editing of many rabbinic works, and the dating of unattributed statements, we must constantly question how reective this corpus of information is regarding synagogues generally. Do rabbinic traditions preserve unique cases that may have been of interest to the sages but were not necessarily reective of the institution as a whole? If so, how limited are they? Perhaps they are more representative of rabbinic synagogues, i.e., those in which the rabbis tended to congregate, than of the majority of synagogues serving the community at large. Or are these sources merely an indication of what the rabbis wished to see rather than what was usually the case? Complicating this matter further is the issue of the nature and extent of rabbinic inuence and involvement in this institution. As we can no longer assume that the rabbis ipso facto wielded authority over synagogue aairs in Late Antiquity, their comments about the institution and its leadership must be treated with a measure of circumspection. With the exception of Babylonia, rabbinic material does not usually relate to the Diaspora. As a result, we possess only vague notions about these Jewish communities from the rabbinic perspective, and little idea as to the ties between them and the rabbis. Generally speaking, each corpus of evidence has its own particular raison dtre, with the synagogue often playing only a marginal role. Each type of source tends to concentrate on certain dimensions of the institution without making any attempt to oer a more comprehensive picture. Rabbinic literature, for example, focuses on the synagogues liturgical and, at times, social aspects; Josephus on its political role; and the New Testament on the synagogue within the context of Jesus and Pauls missions. On a larger scale, archaeology tends to focus on the communal dimension (in its broadest terms) while literary material concentrates on the religious component.8 Nevertheless, even if
8. See my First Century c.e. Synagogue, 124.
introduction
only partial, the information oered by each source is invaluable. Taken together, a fairly comprehensive picture of the synagogue does emerge, and as the range of data is impressive both geographically and chronologically, so, too, are the subjects addressed both directly and indirectly: the physical aspects of the synagogue; artistic expressions; cultural proclivities; communal activities; leadership roles; and liturgical matters. Let us review the main sources to which we will have recourse throughout our study, beginning with the pre-70 era. Josephus notes the existence of synagogues in Judaea within the context of his political narrative of the rst century. In both Dor and Caesarea, the synagogue became a center of controversy during the political struggles between Jews and pagans; in Tiberias, the synagogue (here called proseuche) served the Jewish community as a meeting place for its political deliberations at the outset of the revolt in 6667 c.e. Regarding the Diaspora, Josephus cites a series of Roman documents from the latter half of the rst century b.c.e. aecting Jewish communities in a number of locales, particularly Asia Minor. The rights accorded the Jews under Roman rule are clearly articulated in these privilegia, and on several occasions the latter make explicit reference to the synagogue; more often, they mention activities and functions that we can safely assume took place in this institution. Philo makes only a few passing references to the synagogue or proseuche. In the course of describing the pogroms of 38 c.e., he notes the existence of Alexandrian synagogues, and particularly one monumental and lavishly ornamented building. On several occasions, he mentions certain aspects of the Sabbath morning Torah-reading ritual, as well as other worship practices of the Therapeutae and Essenes. A number of books in the New Testament speak of synagogue-related matters. All the gospels recount Jesus activity in Galilean synagogues, and Luke is especially expansive in his opening account of Jesus preaching in Nazareth. The information in Acts for both Jerusalem and the regions of Asia Minor and Greece is also of primary importance to our understanding of the pre-70 institution. Rabbinic material has preserved a number of traditions that we may assume describe pre-70 synagogues. Of particular importance is the Toseftas relatively elaborate description of a rst-century Alexandrian synagogue. However, many of these rabbinic sources, including the Bavli and most midrashic compilations, are quite late and thus of questionable historical value. Although the pre-70 archaeological material is scanty, it is still of cardinal importance. While remains of at least six synagogue buildings are attestedve in Judaea and one (perhaps two) in the Diaspora (Delos, and possibly Ostia)inscriptions provide the bulk of archaeological evidence from this period. The Theodotos inscription from Jerusalem, that of Julia Severa from Acmonia in Asia Minor, a number of catacomb inscriptions from Rome, three synagogue inscriptions from Berenice (Cyrene), ve from Delos, six from the Bosphorus, and sixteen (or parts thereof ) from Egypt (including papyrologi-
introduction
cal evidence) oer us a varied and far-ranging picture of the institution in the rst century c.e. This situation changes dramatically in the post-70 era. As noted, archaeological material for the Diaspora becomes far more abundant than previously. Thirteen buildings have been identied as synagogues of Late Antiquity; nine additional sites are less certain. Hundreds of inscriptions have been found, most dedicatory in nature and deriving from synagogue buildings, others stemming from a funerary context and mentioning someone associated in his or her lifetime with a synagogue. An even greater abundance of archaeological evidence is to be found with regard to Roman-Byzantine Palestine.9 To date, well over one hundred synagogues have been identied and close to two hundred inscriptions retrieved, almost two-thirds of which are in Hebrew or Aramaic, the remainder in Greek. The score of amulets found in synagogue contexts are likewise of great value, not to speak of the dozens of mosaic oors, some of which are remarkably well preserved. Literary remains relating to the synagogue in this period are scattered among the writings of Byzantine authors (e.g., Scriptores Historiae Augustae), church fathers (Epiphanius, John Chrysostom), the Theodosian Code, and Justinians Novellae. However, the overwhelming preponderance of literary material derives from rabbinic sources. More than four hundred pericopes explicitly mention the synagogue from either an historical, communal, or liturgical perspective; many hundreds, if not thousands, more deal with liturgical activities, most of which undoubtedly took place within the walls of this institution. Other Jewish texts relating to synagogue matters include the mystical Hekhalot texts, the various targumim, Byzantine piyyutim, and Byzantine halakhic material, such as the list of variant practices in Palestine and Babylonia. The methodological problems mentioned above with respect to rabbinic literature hold truemutatis mutandiswith regard to other sources as well. Many of the statements preserved are problematic because of their selectivity, tendentiousness, or fragmentary nature. Even if a report appears to be accurate in and of itself, we are rarely certain whether the instance described was a local phenomenon or one reective of other times and places. Nevertheless, with the required modicum of caution and awareness of these issues, a not insignicant amount of information about the synagogue can be retrieved.
HISTORY OF RESEARCH
To attempt to reconstruct the history of research on the ancient synagogue is, in essence, to relate the histories of research in each of the many areas pertaining to this institution. One may trace the history of research on the synagogue building by focusing on
9. On the criteria for identifying structures as synagogues, see below, Chap. 9.
10
introduction
archaeological reports, on its worship dimension by following publications treating liturgy, and on its artistic and sociocultural dimensions by reviewing those works that concentrate on Jewish art and epigraphical remains. Only on rare occasion has there been an attempt to integrate the various strands into one historical account of the institution. Despite the enormous diversity in the development of the various elds of research, there are many common characteristics among them. Until the mid-twentieth century, only a handful of scholars mastered each of these disciplines. The assumption shared by most of them is that the development of the synagogue underwent a steady linear progression, and thus much of their work focused on tracing this evolution. Let me oer two examples of this phenomenon. The rst concerns the synagogue building. In its classical expression, primarily within the realm of architecture, the once regnant theory states that the physical appearance of the synagogue evolved in three distinct phases in Late Antiquity. This particular theory crystallized over the rst half of the twentieth century, beginning with the rst serious study of the ancient synagogue, Kohl and Watzingers Antike Synagogen in Galilaea (in 1916). Based upon an overall survey and limited excavation probes carried out between the years 1905 and 1907 in eleven Galilean and Golan buildings (including one on the Carmel), these scholars established criteria that became axiomatic in synagogue studies for decades, i.e., that the Galilean synagogues were built in the late second and early third centuries, constituted a recognizable architectural group, and were modeled architecturally and artistically after buildings in Roman Syria, especially the Roman basilica. Several decades later, in 1934, Sukenik published his Schweich lectures under the title Ancient Synagogues in Palestine and Greece, in which he added a second tier to this theory by identifying a series of Christian basilica-like synagogue structures (e.g., Naaran, Bet Alpha, Gerasa) that date to the sixth and seventh centuries. These, he claimed, belonged to another, later, synagogue type. In 1949, Sukenik further developed this distinction, adding ammat Gader, useifa, and Jericho to the list. Finally, in the 1950s, a third type was proposed by Goodenough and Avi-Yonah, who posited a broadhouse, or transitional, stage, with the synagogue of Eshtemoa serving as the primary example of this type (see below, Chap. 9). The basis of the above approach was the assumption that synagogue typology is linked to its chronology: dierent types of synagogues were built at dierent times. Thus, at any given moment one particular type of building predominated, although there may have been some overlap in the transition from stage to stage. A similar approach characterized the study of Jewish prayer, particularly with regard to the development of the Amidah, or Shemoneh Esreh, which, owing to its centrality and importance, was the primary focus of many early studies. Already in the nineteenth century, a number of scholars began setting the parameters for the subject when they posited a linear development for this prayer, i.e., that it evolved from a shorter, simpler version into a longer, more complex one. Zunz addressed the subject, and was followed in
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11
the rst half of the twentieth century by Kohler, Finkelstein, Elbogen, and others. The core of the Amidah was generally traced back to the Persian or early Hellenistic periods and was described as having developed incrementally in response to internal and external factors (e.g., competing Jewish ideologies, external political and cultural inuences, persecutions, the destruction of the Temple) until it was fully standardized under Rabban Gamaliel of Yavneh ca. 100 c.e. The study of Jewish prayer was revolutionized by the ndings from the Cairo Genizah, not the least of which was an awareness of the liturgical diversity in the rst millennium c.e. Not only did this material aect our understanding of the development of prayer, it also related to the cycles of scriptural readings for the Sabbath and festivals. Inspired and facilitated by the texts from the Cairo Genizah, scholars such as Mann and Bchler wrote extensively on the triennial Torah and prophetic readingsand their variations as reected in these early documents. The rst half of the twentieth century also produced several formidable works intended to serve as systematic compilations of the known data relating to the synagogue. S. Krauss Synagogale Altertmer (1922) focused primarily on the material culture of the institution as reected in rabbinic literature and the limited archaeological evidence then available. Elbogens still denitive Der jdische Gottesdienst in seiner geschichtlichen Entwicklung (1913; revised Hebrew version 1972; English version 1993) focused on the synagogues liturgical and, secondarily, physical and communal dimensions. Since the mid-twentieth century, a veritable explosion has taken place in synagogue studies. The reasons for this ourish of activity are many: (1) The sheer number of synagogues unearthed has risen dramatically. Buildings were discovered in urban centers such as Caesarea, Tiberias, Bet Shean, and Sepphoris, as well as in rural settings such as Maon (Nirim). Following the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, synagogues were found in Gaza, Susiya, and En Gedi, as were a host of structures in the Golan and the southern Judaean hills. At the same time, the number of synagogues discovered in the Diaspora has almost doubled; the newly identied synagogues include the building in Ostia and the monumental edice at Sardis. All of these nds have generated a renewed interest in the synagogue building per se, as well as in related areas. (2) New elds of inquiry have been created, particularly as a result of a series of seminal studies, foremost among which is the thirteen-volume work of Goodenough, Jewish Symbols in the Greco-Roman Period, published between 1953 and 1968. In fact, his eorts at collecting a hitherto unimaginable array of Jewish artistic works from Late Antiquity spurred the creation of the eld of ancient Jewish art. Goodenough, however, had aimed to do much more, hoping that his collection of material would serve a much grander design of reconceptualizing the nature and form of Judaism in Late Antiquity. This goal, however, was never achieved. The study of Jewish art was given a signicant boost with the publication of the nal excavation report in 1956 of the Dura Europos synagogue. Discovered in 1932, this build-
12
introduction
ing is by far the most sensational and revolutionary ancient synagogue ever unearthed. Kraelings ocial publication on the site was soon followed by Goodenoughs detailed and controversial analysis in volumes 911 of his Jewish Symbols (1964). These two monumental works ushered in a plethora of studies in a host of elds, the ramications of which continue to our own day. Similar groundbreaking eorts were taking place in epigraphical studies. The rst major corpus of Jewish epigraphical evidence was published by Frey. While volume 1 of his Corpus Inscriptionum Judaicarum had already appeared in 1936, the publication of volume 2, including inscriptions from the eastern Mediterranean (Asia Minor, Syria, and Palestine) and North Africa, appeared only posthumously in 1952. For all its inadequacies in no small part probably due to the exigencies surrounding its publicationthis singular achievement provided the springboard for many other collections that appeared in the coming decades, each of which has focused on specic geographical areas or types of inscriptions. Such studies include the corpus of catacomb inscriptions that provided the basis for Leons The Jews of Ancient Rome (1960), Rutgers The Jews in Late Ancient Rome (1995); the corpus of Egyptian inscriptions appended to volume 3 of Corpus Papyrorum Judaicarum, edited by Tcherikover, Fuks, and Stern (1964), Lifshitz Donateurs et fondateurs dans les synagogues juives (1967), the Hebrew volumes of Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic (1978), and Roth-Gerson, The Greek Inscriptions from the Synagogues in Eretz-Israel (1987) and The Jews of Syria as Reected in the Greek Inscriptions (2001); and the three volumes of the Jewish Inscriptions Project of the Faculty of Divinity at the University of Cambridge: Horbury and Noys Jewish Inscriptions of Graeco-Roman Egypt (1992) and Noys two-volume Jewish Inscriptions of Western Europe (199395). (3) This era also witnessed methodological and conceptual breakthroughs that breathed new life and insights into elds that had lain dormant for decades. Heinemanns Prayer in the Talmud: Forms and Patterns (Hebrew, 1964; English trans., 1977) introduced into the study of Jewish prayer a form-critical approach widely used in biblical studies, and he single-handedly revitalized the historical study of Jewish prayer over these past forty years. Heinemann espoused the theory that various prayer forms developed in different contexts and by dierent circles within Jewish society, and these were transmitted orally from generation to generation and from place to place; thus, a plethora of versions were in circulation simultaneously. As a result of his inuence, the linear approach to the development of Jewish prayer has generally been abandoned, as well as the assumption that it was created by a Jewish leadership. A similar development subsequently took place in the archaeological realm. With the discovery of the remains of numerous additional structures, the earlier-mentioned concept of a linear development of architectural types of synagogues has generally become pass and has been replaced by the assumption that dierent architectural types were in use at one and the same time (see below, Chap. 9). (4) An abundance of newly published material has revolutionized a number of areas
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13
in the study of Jewish liturgy. We have already taken note of the extraordinary documentation provided by the Cairo Genizah, which aected practically every area of synagogue studies. Renewed interest in targumic texts has taken place through the discovery of new sources. On the one hand, the Qumran nds have revealed fragments of Aramaic targumim in use in the pre-70 era; on the other, the sensational discovery of the Neoti manuscript of the Torah in the Vatican library in 1949 has brought to light the earliest, most complete targum text known to date. This latter discovery was particularly instrumental in generating a renaissance in targumic studies. The increased interest in the study of midrash over the past generation has led to renewed scholarly attention in the homiletical material found in rabbinic literature. Heinemanns form-critical approach to Jewish prayer has revitalized the examination of other rabbinic genres as well; he himselfuntil his death in 1978devoted numerous studies to the rabbinic homily, particularly the proem. Moreover, interest in early Jewish liturgy has spilled over to the eld of scriptural lectionary, an area that had not been seriously addressed since earlier in the century. Attention was directed toward uncovering traces of the triennial lectionary cycle in extant literary works, and studies such as Guildings The Fourth Gospel and Jewish Worship (1960), though controversial, have been illuminating in this regard. The area of piyyut has received a great deal of scholarly attention since the 1960s. Building on the earlier work of Schirmann and Zulay, major contributions have been made in this eld by Mirsky, Z. M. Rabinowitz, Yahalom, and especially Fleischer. The study of this religious and literary genre was begun by Zunz over a century ago; however, the increased availability of Genizah material has revolutionized this eld. Instead of assuming a medieval origin and a Muslim context for the piyyut, as had once been the case, it is universally conceded today that this genre crystallized in Byzantine Palestine, when literally thousands of such poems were written. To date, we know the names of no less than twenty paytanim who ourished in Late Antiquity, as well as other anonymous ones. Almost unknown several generations ago, Yannai is now identied as a sixth-century poet who penned at least two thousand poems, as probably did the greatest of the ancient paytanim a generation later, Elazar Ha-Qallir (or Qillir). (5) The urry of activity in synagogue studies is also an expression of the dramatic worldwide growth in Jewish studies within institutions of higher learning in the last part of the twentieth century. This has been noticeable in Israel since 1967, with the dramatic increase in the number and size of the countrys universities; in North America, where Jewish studies began growing at a feverish pace in the mid-1960s; and, to a lesser extent, in England, Germany, and elsewhere in Europe. As a result, the sheer quantity of scholarly material being produced on synagogue-related subjects is far greater now than it was a generation or two ago. (6) Finally, it is important to note that the marked interest in the ancient synagogue is in no small measure due to the attention Christian scholars have accorded the Jew-
14
introduction
ish background of the New Testament and early Christianity. Although such activity was already apparent at the outset of the century with Schweitzers The Quest of the Historical Jesus (German 1906; English 1926), a much greater openness and receptivity has been evident from the mid-twentieth century onward, such as Davies Paul and Rabbinic Judaism (1948). Among the reasons for this change are the following: the post-Holocaust Christian reassessment of attitudes toward Jews and Judaism; the impact of the creation of the State of Israel; the exploration of Christian roots within Judaism stimulated by the Qumran evidence; and, nally, the eects of the prevailing atmosphere of tolerance and understanding generated by the changes in Catholic policy in the decisions of Vatican II. The resultant contributions of Christian scholars to Jewish studies over the last generation have been a major catalyst in bringing synagogue-related studies to the fore. The heightened interest in synagogue studies has spurred a number of attempts to summarize the institutions history in broad outline, including I. Levys The Synagogue: Its History and Function (1963), Hrubys Die Synagoge: Geschichtliche Entwicklung einer Institution (1971), and Schrages extensive entry on the synagogue () in volume 7 of the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (English trans. 1971).10 A plethora of studies devoted to the Second Temple synagogue has appeared in recent years. Three major monographs address various aspects of this phenomenon: Binder, Into the Temple Courts (1999); Runesson, The Origins of the Synagogue (2001); and Claussen, Versammlung (2002). A fourth monograph, Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions of the Bosporus Kingdom (1999), oers a detailed analysis of these most unusual inscriptions from the rst centuries c.e. In addition, a slew of recent articles deal with a wide range of synagogue-related issues, such as the synagogues of Rome (Richardson); the Jerusalem Temple and the synagogue (Binder, Flesher); collegia and synagogue (Richardson); the Diaspora synagogue generally (Rajak, Fitzpatrick-McKinley); and the debate regarding the date of the Galilean synagogue (Magness, E. M. Meyers, Strange, and Aviam). This explosion in synagogue-related research persists to this very day. Not only does material continue to issue forthbe it new primary data from excavations, Genizah material, or secondary studiesbut more rened methodological approaches and new assumptions underpin most scholarly works. We have already noted that the neat linear approach has largely been replaced by a more complex, multifaceted one. Moreover, it is now generally assumed that institutional developments such as that of the synagogue were not determined by authorities from above, nor did they occur at the same time or in a monolithic fashion; rather, a more diversied and dynamic approach is to be preferred, one which appears to be far more reective of the actual historical processes. A greater sensitivity to methodological issues includes a more sophisticated use of literary sources, especially the New Testament and rabbinic literature. In the case of the
10. See also Hoppe, Synagogues and Churches; Bloedhorn and Httenmeister, Synagogue, 26797; Schrage, , 798847.
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15
latter, this involves a more systematic distinction between earlier (tannaitic) and later (amoraic) material as well as between sources of Palestinian and Babylonian provenance. Not only are the tendentiousness and selectivity of these literary sources more widely acknowledged, so, too, are the literary and theological agendas of each of these writings. At the same time, a growing number of scholars are more inclined to explore the social and cultural implications of archaeological nds, and interdisciplinary studies, although still in their infancy in this area, are more in evidence of late. Moreover, scholarly treatments are now generally more attuned to external inuences on Jewish society than had hitherto been the case. Rather than questioning whether such factors existed, eorts are now directed at determining the degree of outside inuence in what areas of Jewish life, in which geographical regions, among which classes of society, and under what historical circumstances. The mid-twentieth century was pivotal in redening this eld of inquiry. Liebermans works (1942, 1950) and Hengels magnum opus (German, 1969; English trans., 1974) framed an era in which a series of pathbreaking studies, including those of Goodenough, M. Smith, Scholem, Bickerman, Schalit, and Tcherikover, were written.11 In recent decades, new aspects of the ancient synagogue have been addressed in addition to the older, more traditional ones. The role of women in the synagogue (Brooten), the place and authority of the rabbis (L. Levine, Goodman, and S. J. D. Cohen, Hezser, and S. Schwartz), the iconographic interpretation of synagogue art (Fine, Khnel, Z. Weiss, and H. Kessler), the borrowing of pagan and Christian motifs and symbols and their meaning in a Jewish context (Foerster, Ovadiah, Habas, Talgam, and Hachlili) these subjects and more have engaged scholarly attention of late. Also noteworthy is the burgeoning number of studies focusing on the Diaspora synagogue. While Sukenik, Goodenough, and Kraeling addressed this subject earlier on,12 it was the discovery of the Sardis building, following the nal publication of the Dura Europos excavations, that ushered in a remarkably fruitful era of research and inquiry about this Diaspora institution. The main catalyst has been Kraabel, who himself participated in the Sardis dig and has since written a plethora of studies on the Sardis building as well as various aspects of the Diaspora synagogue.13 Other notable contributors to this eld in11. See my Judaism and Hellenism. 12. Sukenik, Ancient Synagogues; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 70100; Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue. 13. See the following studies by Kraabel: Judaism in Western Asia Minor; Hypsistos and the Synagogue at Sardis, 8193; Melito the Bishop and the Synagogue at Sardis, 7785; Paganism and Judaism, 1333; Diaspora Synagogue, 477510; Jews in Imperial Rome, 4158; Social Systems of Six Diaspora Synagogues, 7991; Excavated Synagogues, 22736; Roman Diaspora, 44564; Impact of the Discovery, 17890; Synagoga Caeca, 21946; Unity and Diversity, 4960; (and A. Seager), Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 17890. Many of these studies have been collected in a festschrift in his honor; see Overman and MacLennan, Diaspora Jews and Judaism.
16
introduction
clude Hengel, Seager, Foerster, Ovadiah, White, Levinskaya, Feldman, Rutgers, Richardson, Runesson, and Trmper.14 The two Diaspora synagogue sites that functioned in the rst two centuries c.e. (Delos and Ostia) have merited a number of illuminating studies (Runesson, White, and Trmper). The study of the ancient synagogue has been facilitated by an ever-growing corpus of scholarly aids. Recent decades have witnessed the appearance of convenient handbooks on ancient synagogues, such as those of Saller, Chiat, and Z. Ilan.15 Up-to-date summaries of archaeological nds have been made available in the New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land,16 as well as in a collection of rabbinic material relating to synagogue sites by Httenmeister and Reeg.17 Hachlilis volumes, Ancient Jewish Art and Archaeology in the Land of Israel (1988) and Ancient Jewish Art and Archaeology in the Diaspora (1998), provide a broad overview of synagogue material, particularly the artistic dimension, and, in eect, update Goodenoughs major work in many ways. Several computer data bases have made much of rabbinic literature available;18 in recent years at least nineteen volumes of essays on the ancient synagogue have appeared, not to speak of several dozen monographs and hundreds of articles oering overviews of the subject or detailed studies of the synagogue in one or more of its manifestations.19 The appearance of basic compendia is nowhere more evident than in the eld of epig14. Hengel: Proseuche und Synagoge, 2754; Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 11048. Seager: Building History, 42535; Architecture of the Dura and Sardis Synagogues, 14993; Synagogue at Sardis, 17884; Recent Historiography, 3947; (and A. T. Kraabel), Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 16878. Foerster: Survey of Ancient Diaspora Synagogues, 16471; Remains of a Synagogue at Corinth, 185; Fifth Century Synagogue in Leptis Magna, 5358. Ovadiah: Ancient Synagogues in Asia Minor, 85766; Ancient Synagogues from Magna Grecia, 920. White: Delos Synagogue Revisited, 13360; Building Gods House, 60101; Social Origins; Feldman: Diaspora Synagogues, 4866. Rutgers: Diaspora Synagogues, 6795; Hidden Heritage of Diaspora Judaism; Richardson: Early Synagogues as Collegia, 90109; Architectural Case, 90117; Runesson: Synagogue, 2999; Trmper: Oldest Original Synagogue, 51398. Mention should also be made of Trebilcos Jewish Communities, which, while not dealing with the synagogue per se, still contains an enormous trove of material regarding Asia Minor. 15. Saller, Second Revised Catalogue of Ancient Synagogues; Chiat, Handbook of Synagogue Architecture; Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues. 16. E. Stern, NEAEHL. 17. Httenmeister and Reeg, Antiken Synagogen. 18. Bar-Ilan University Responsa Project; Davka CD-ROM Judaic Classics Library. 19. These collections of essays include: L. Levine, Ancient Synagogues Revealed; idem, Synagogue in Late Antiquity; Gutmann, Dura-Europos Synagogue; idem, Synagogue; idem, Ancient Synagogues; Z. Safrai, Ancient Synagogue; Oppenheimer et al., Synagogues in Antiquity; Overman and MacLennan, Diaspora Jews and Judaism; Hachlili, Ancient Synagogues in Israel; Klil-Hahoresh, Synagogues; S. Elizur et al., Knesset Ezra; Urman and Flesher, Ancient Synagogues; Fine, Sacred Realm; idem, Jews Christians, and Polytheists; Kee and Cohick, Evolution of the Synagogue; Avery-Peck and Neusner, Judaism in Late Antiquity; Olsson and Zetterholm, Ancient Synagogue; Olsson et al., Synagogue of Ancient Ostia; Tabory, Kenishta.
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17
raphy. As noted, a number of important corpora have appeared over the past twenty years: Navehs collection of Hebrew and Aramaic inscriptions, Roth-Gersons collections of Greek inscriptions from synagogues in Israel (1987) and Syria (2001),20 the volumes of Horbury and Noy on Egypt and Western Europe, Kroll and Cross publications of the Sardis inscriptions,21 as well as Kants discussion of ancient Jewish inscriptions in Greek and Latin.22 Most recently, three volumes of Inscriptiones Judaicae Orientis have been published, covering the provinces of Eastern Europe, Asia Minor, Syria, and Cyprus.23 Finally, new synagogue-related elds have emerged. Of cardinal importance are the studies on ancient Jewish mysticism (Hekhalot literature). Some of these compositions contain prayers and incantations identical (or almost identical) to prayers known from synagogue liturgy. What the precise relationship was between these mystical circles, the rabbis, and the actual synagogue prayers at the time is far from certain, but some sort of connection seems to have existed. Another important eld is Jewish magic. Beginning with the publication of Sepher HaRazim in 1966 by Margalioth and continuing with the volumes by Naveh and Shaked (Amulets and Magical Bowls: Aramaic Incantations of Late Antiquity, 1985; Magic Spells and Formulae: Aramaic Incantations of Late Antiquity, 1993), the scholarly world has been presented with a convenient collection of Jewish magical material from Late Antiquity. To these must be added the texts on magic from the Genizah of Late Antiquity edited by Schiman and Swartz (Hebrew and Aramaic Incantation Texts from the Cairo Genizah, 1992). Despite this prodigious display of research, almost all these studies have been directed to one or another specic eld of research: archaeology, liturgy, epigraphy, art history, etc. Most are highly specialized, concentrating on a particular dimension of the synagogue or on a particular type of evidence.24 The aim of the present study is to integrate the data from these diverse elds into a comprehensive account of this pivotal Jewish institution over a thousand-year period. It aims to trace the synagogues growth and development from a variety of perspectives in light of the forces at play from within the Jewish community and from without.
20. Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria. 21. Kroll, Greek Inscriptions of the Sardis Synagogue, 5127; Cross, Hebrew Inscriptions from Sardis, 319. 22. Kant, Jewish Inscriptions in Greek and Latin, 671713. 23. Noy, Panayotov, and Bloedhorn, I: Eastern Europe; Ameling, II: Kleinasien; Noy and Bloedhorn, III: Syria and Cyprus. I have not yet had the opportunity to consult these volumes. 24. An exception to the above are the integrative studies regarding sacred space that have recently appeared; see Branham, Sacred Space under Erasure, 37594; idem, Vicarious Sacrality, 31945; Fine, This Holy Place.
part
two
ORIGINS
etermining the origin and early development of the synagogue has presented modern scholarship with a seemingly insurmountable challenge. As often happens with institutions, movements, and ideas of revolutionary proportions, the forces that shape new initiatives, especially in their embryonic stages, remain shrouded in mystery. For a period of time these initiatives crystallize outside the limelight of history, only to appear later in our sources in a relatively developed form. Such, indeed, was the case with the ancient synagogue. Despite our understandable interest in knowing when such an institution rst appeared, what factors were decisive in its development, who was responsible for it, and where exactly this creation took place, the sources at our disposal are oblivious to these issueseither because they are not as historically oriented as we would have wished or perhaps because these early formative stages simply were not worthy of comment at the time. The earliest hard evidence we have for the existence of a synagogue appears in a number of inscriptions from third-century b.c.e. Ptolemaic Egypt that mention a proseuche. To date, about twelve such inscriptions and papyri have been discovered from the Hellenistic period, and the earliest archaeological remains of a synagogue building on the island of Delos in the Aegean indicate a second- or possibly mid-rst-century b.c.e. date of construction.1
1. For a detailed presentation of the evidence, see below, Chap. 4. The relationship between the synagoge and proseuche has been discussed on a number of occasions. While several scholars clearly dieren-
22
It is not until the rst century c.e. that the synagogue emerges into the full light of history as the central communal institution of Jewish communities throughout Judaea and the Diaspora. Major cities, such as Jerusalem, Alexandria, Rome, and probably Antioch, each boasted a number of such institutions, and villages, towns, and cities throughout the Roman Empire probably had at least one. The number and range of both literary and archaeological sources referring to the synagogue at this time are indeed impressive.2 The existence of a proseuche in third-century b.c.e. Egypt indicates that the synagogues roots in the Diaspora go back at least to this time. What are the implications of this date as regards the institutions origins in the rest of the Diaspora and in Judaea? Are we to follow such evidence alone and therefore posit a Ptolemaic Egyptian origin? Or can we assume that the synagogues beginnings may date back to the Restoration, Exilic, or perhaps even First Temple times?
STATE OF RESEARCH
As might be expected, the theories propounded to explain the emergence of the synagogue range far and wide. Some scholars date its origins to as early as the ninth or eighth century b.c.e., others look to the late seventh century. Most have opted for either a sixth-century date, at the time of the Babylonian exile, or a fth-century Judaean setting, thus assuming that the synagogue emerged as a result of the initiatives of Ezra and Nehemiah. Some scholars have posited dates ranging from the fourth down to the rst centuries b.c.e. This wide spectrum of opinion is both chronological and geographical. While some have placed the rst appearance of the synagogue in a Babylonian or Egyptian setting, others assume that Judaea provided the original social and religious context. The reasons for this variety of opinions abound. First and foremost is the sheer absence of data. With no clear-cut references at hand, the only recourse has been to speculate on the time, place, and circumstances surrounding the synagogues emergence. In reality, such eorts have been inuenced by one or more of the following considerations: (1) determining a major event in Jewish history that may have given rise to this new and revolutionary institution; (2) locating a reference in the Bible that may point to the existence of a setting that could be called a proto-synagogue or a synagogue-in-the-making; (3) construing the absence of references to synagogues, particularly in Judaean literature of the Persian and Hellenistic periods, as an indication that the synagogue did not exist then; (4) following only the existing hard evidence, i.e., that of third-century b.c.e. Egypt or rst-century c.e. Palestine, as the decisive factor in determining origins. Secondly, there is a lack of clarity as to the meaning of the term synagogue (tiate between the two, regarding them as very distinct institutions (see below, note 4), most assume that they were basically the same, at most with a somewhat dierent emphasis. See my Second Temple Synagogue, 2021, and the literature cited therein. 2. See below, Chaps. 35.
origins
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) and, consequently, what characteristics and developments should determine its time and place of origin. As noted, the term may have referred to a congregation, any group of people (qahal or edah [ ], in the Septuagint, Ben Sira, and targumim), or a building.3 And even if congregation is meant, the synagogue of asidim ( I Macc. 2, 42) and the synagogue of scribes ( ibid., 7, 12) were probably no more than groups of like-minded pious individuals, thus rendering the term meaningless for our purposes. On the other hand, to look for a specic type of building might not be a fruitful exercise, for many dierent settings could have been used by a synagogue-community: a public building constructed expressly for religious purposes, a multipurpose communal building, a private residence or part of a home converted for public use. Alternatively, the synagogue might be dened solely on the basis of its functions and status within a community, that is, its institutional role (e.g., organization, leadership, activities, etc.). In addition to synagoge (place of assembly), a number of other terms were used (almost always in the Diaspora) for this institution, each apparently emphasizing a dierent dimension or characteristic; the choice of a name depended on local needs and self-perceptions (proseuche [house of prayer]; to hieron [sanctuary]; to hagios topos [a holy place]; eucheion [a place of prayer]; sabbateion [a Sabbath meeting place]; didaskeleion [a place of instruction]; bet am [house of people]; amphitheater; and temple).4 Thirdly, what was the nature of this institution at its very beginning? Was it primarily a social-communal institution or was it, rst and foremost, a religious one? And if the latter, which particular religious activity was focallistening to a prophet? praying? fasting? reading the Torah? Fourthly, how might one determine the emergence of the synagogue, or of any other institution, for that matter? Is it the rst appearance of any of the aforementioned activities? If so, then what about the issue of continuity? Perhaps a particular phenomenon surfaced in an early context but then disappeared for a long while, leaving no trace in Jewish religious practice other than an isolated literary reference? For example, should the Torah-reading ceremony described in Neh. 810 be considered the beginning of the synagogue, since it may have been the origin of the practice of Torah reading? Or was the ceremony of Ezra and Nehemiah only a onetime occurrence conducted under very special circumstances? If so, the Torah-reading ceremony of the later synagogue would then have been the outcome of other factors, with the earlier setting serving, at best, as some sort of historical precedent for a later development. Finally, one is faced with the issue of whether to place credence in later rabbinic tradi3. See above, Chap. 1; and TDNT, VII, 80210. 4. On these terms, see L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 1314; D. Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 91154; and below, Chap. 4, notes 237240, and Chap. 5. Scholars assuming dierent institutions on the basis of dierent names include: Gutmann, Synagogue Origins, 3; Runesson, Origins, 42976; and Rajak, Synagogue and Community, 2238.
24
tions. What should one make of the rabbinic claims that the miqdash meat of Ezek. 11:16 and the maon ( ,dwelling place) of Ps. 90:1 are indeed evidence for the synagogues existence? 5 Such traditions are highly questionable and are even more compromised by the contradictory claims made elsewhere in rabbinic literature regarding the origins of several fundamental synagogue practices. For example, various sources maintain that the weekly scriptural readings originated with either Moses, a body of prophets and elders, the Men of the Great Assembly, a group of former prophets, or early asidim.6 With regard to the Amidah, dierent sources declare that this prayer originated with the biblical Patriarchs, Moses, a group of 120 elders and prophets, or the Yavnean Simeon Hapaquli.7 In view of these disparate notions, it seems certain that such traditions are little more than anachronistic musings, perhaps for homiletical purposes, and are of little historical worth. Given this formidable array of issues, it should come as no surprise that the theories regarding synagogue origins are diverse and, at times, far aeld. In the absence of explicit references, scholars have clutched at any and all hints and allusions, utilizing them as evidence for the institutions emergence. The more important of these theories may be briey summarized.8 A number of scholars have focused on the First Temple period as the context for the synagogues origins. Several have pointed to Solomons references to the Temple as a place of prayer, others to the custom of regularly visiting a prophet on the Sabbath and New Moon.9 Of greater attraction has been the presumed impact of Josiahs reforms in 622/621 b.c.e., which prohibited sacrices outside Jerusalem. This is considered by many to have been the crucial factor that led to the creation of a new religious framework based on non-sacricial worship.10 Finally, terms such as bet haam ( , Jer. 39:8) and
5. B Megillah 29a. See also the reference in Pesiqta Rabbati 26 (p. 129b) to the prophet Zephaniah preaching in the synagogue, as did Jeremiah in the marketplace and Huldah to the women. So, too, with regard to the targumim, which frequently associate biblical gures with the synagogue; see, for example, Targum Jonathan to Exod. 18:12; Judg. 5:9, as well as the targumim to I Chron. 16:31 and Isa. 1:13. 6. Moses: Y Megillah 4, 1, 75a. Prophets and elders: Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Beshala, 1 (p. 154); Mekhilta de R. imon b. Jochai, Beshala 15, 22 (p. 103). Great Assembly: B Berakhot 33a. Former prophets: SifreDeuteronomy 343 (p. 395). asidim: Midrash on Psalms 17, 4 (p. 64a). 7. Biblical patriarchs: B Berakhot 26b; Midrash Hagadol, Genesis 19:27; 28:11 (pp. 324, 498). Moses: Y Berakhot 7, 11c; Y Megillah 3, 8, 74c; Midrash on Psalms 19, 22 (p. 82b). 120 elders, prophets, and Simeon Hapaquli: B Megillah 17b18a. 8. For useful surveys regarding the origins of the synagogue, see Weingreen, Origin of the Synagogue, 6884; Rowley, Worship, 21345; Hruby, Die Synagoge, 1930; Gutmann, Origin of the Synagogue, 3640; idem, Synagogue Origins, 16; L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 810; and the recent Hachlili, Origin of the Synagogue: A Reassessment, 3447; and Runesson, Origins, 67167. 9. I Kgs. 8; II Kgs. 4:23; Finkelstein, Origin of the Synagogue, 4959; idem, Pharisees, 563; Weingreen, Origin of the Synagogue, 6884; I. Levy, Synagogue, 12. See also Levenson, From Temple to Synagogue, 14366. 10. Morgenstern, Origin of the Synagogue, 192.; Weingreen, Origin of the Synagogue, 6884;
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moadei el ( , Ps. 74:8) have also been invoked to substantiate a pre-Exilic date of origin.11 A second approach, preferred by most scholars over the years, places the origin of the synagogue in a sixth-century Babylonian Exilic setting.12 The destruction of the First Temple and the subsequent exile have been viewed as traumatic and decisive factors leading to the creation of an alternative form of religious worship. The gathering of elders to hear the words of a prophet (Ezek. 8:1; 14:1) and, to a lesser extent, the later rabbinic interpretation of Ezekiels lesser or diminished sanctuary (B Megillah 29a) as referring to the synagogue have been invoked to substantiate this dating.13 Another view regards the Restoration period, particularly the activities of Ezra and Nehemiah in fth-century Jerusalem, as the time of the synagogues beginnings.14 Given the centrality of the Torah reading and its concomitant exposition in a later synagogue context, some have viewed the public reading and explanation of the Torah by Ezra in the
Weinfeld, Deuteronomy, 44. Some have argued that the synagogue was a presupposition of Josiahs reforms (von Waldow, Origin of the Synagogue Reconsidered, 26984); others have opined that it was a consequence of them (Wellhausen, Geschichte, 184). Some claim to have discerned early sermons and catechetical instruction (presumably in a synagogue setting) in the books of Jeremiah and Deuteronomy. Both Judaean and Babylonian settings have also been suggested (Nicholson, Preaching to the Exiles). 11. So, for example, Lw, Gesammelte Schriften, IV, 5.; idem, Der Synagogale Rituus, 97. See also Donner, Argumente zur Datierung des 74. Psalms, 4150; Gelston, Note on Psalm lxxiv 8, 8286; Rowley, Worship, 21821 and literature cited there. For vigorous reservations, see Haran, Priest, Temple and Worship, 181 n. 11. Another event sometimes invoked as a catalyst for the creation of the synagogue is the desecration of the Temple by King Manasseh, who reigned from 687 to 642 b.c.e. (II Kgs. 21:47). It is assumed that under these circumstances alternative secretive religious frameworks were sought (Finkelstein, Origin of the Synagogue, 5253). See also Janssen, who, in Juda in der Exilszeit, 156., opines that the beginnings of the synagogue may have taken form in the meetings of prophetic disciples in the pre-Exilic period. 12. A view already propounded by tenth-century Sherira Gaon of Pumbeditha (Iggeret Harav Sherira Gaon [pp. 72.]; see also Gutmann, Sherira Gaon, 20912) and by sixteenth-century Sigonio, in his De republica Hebraeorum (63.; reprinted in Ugolino, Thesaurus antiquitatum sacrarum, IV, ccxci). See also Schrer, History, II, 426; Wellhausen, Geschichte, 196.; Bacher, Synagogue, 619; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 189; Herford, Pharisees, 8991; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 5266; G. F. Moore, Judaism, I, 283; Baron, Jewish Community, I, 5963, 73; idem, Social and Religious History of the Jews, I, 126; Landsberger, House of the People, 15354; Janssen, Juda in der Exilszeit; Rowley, Worship, 22425; Sandmel, Judaism and Christian Beginnings, 143; Shanks, Judaism in Stone, 21.; Levenson, From Temple to Synagogue, 14366. 13. Another line of argument dates the synagogue to sixth-century Judaea, associating it with either the fast days then being commemorated (Zech. 8) or the institution of the maamadot, assumed by some to have crystallized around that time (Landman, Origin of the Synagogue, 32225). On the maamadot, see below. 14. Mentioned as a possibility by both Schrer (History, II, 426) and Bacher (Synagogue, 619), but advocated by S. Safrai (Synagogue, 90913) and M. Smith (Jewish Religious Life, 25860). See also Weinfeld, Biblical Roots, 54763.
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month of Tishri, 444 b.c.e., as the catalyst for the emergence of the synagogue. Proponents of this view either seek support by invoking later rabbinic traditions that view the age of Ezra as the critical period in the development of synagogue liturgy, in particular the Torah-reading ceremony,15 or refer to Persian imperial policy as having fostered this practice. Most recently, Runesson has suggested that the Persian context played a crucial role in the emergence of the synagogue. Basing himself on theories that posit the centrality and importance of imperial policy in Persian Jerusalem,16 he claims that the Torahreading ceremony itself was a Jewish implementation of an empire-wide Persian initiative in the sixth and fth centuries b.c.e. 17 Over the past century, scholarly opinion has generally been divided over these last three options: a seventh-century b.c.e. date focusing on the Josianic reforms, a sixthcentury Babylonian Exilic venue, or a fth-century b.c.e. Persian Jerusalem venue with the Torah-reading ceremony at its center. All three relate to the synagogue as a primarily religious institution, the rst two as a place of worship (for prayer and prophetic discourse) in lieu of sacrices, the last as a liturgical-scriptural context in which the Torah reading was its focus. Whatever their popularity, these options far from exhaust the scope and variety of views on the subject, particularly in recent decades. In 1931, Zeitlin proposed a fourthcentury setting, viewing the synagogue as a primarily communal institution, as indicated by its name, synagoge. He posits that the inhabitants of the towns and villages in PersianHellenistic Judaea would congregate to discuss communal aairs; these town meetings, at rst convened primarily for social and political purposes, gradually assumed a religious stamp under Pharisaic inuence. A similar idea had already been put forth by Lw, although he himself dated the synagogues emergence to the First Temple period.18 More recently, Hengel has argued for a Hellenistic Egyptian setting.19 Following a line of argument articulated earlier by Bousset, Gressmann, Friedlnder, and others,20 Hengel bases his claim on several considerations. First of all, he follows the existing evidence, namely, that the rst clear-cut indication of the existence of synagogues appears
15. Y Megillah 4, 1, 75a; B Bava Qama 82a; B Megillah 3a; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 19192. 16. Blenkinsopp, Mission, 40921; Hoglund, Achaemenid Imperial Administration. 17. Runesson, Origins, 259303, 39598; and more succinctly, see idem, Persian Imperial Politics, 6389. For reactions (some sympathetic, most reserved, if not opposed) to this approach of attributing a signicant degree of Persian inuence on the composition and promulgation of the Torah, see the collection of articles in Watts, Persia and Torah. 18. Zeitlin, Studies, 113 (= Origin of the Synagogue, 6981). Landman (Origin of the Synagogue, 31725) oers a variation of Zeitlins approach, which dates the book of Esther to this period and associates the word ,which appears only here in biblical literature, with the synagogue (bet knesset) (Studies, 7). On Lw, see above, note 11. 19. Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 16180 (= Gutmann, Synagogue, 3150). 20. According to Bousset and Gressmann (Die Religion des Judentums, 172) and Friedlnder (Synagoge und Kirche, 56.), the synagogue rst appeared in pre-Hasmonean Egypt.
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in inscriptions from third-century b.c.e. Hellenistic Egypt. Secondly, he argues that the synagogue community was, in fact, a Jewish form of the Hellenistic religious association prevalent in Ptolemaic Egypt. The emergence of the synagogue, then, was not only an outcome of developments within the Jewish community, but also the product of forces from without. Griths carried Hengels argument one step further, claiming an Egyptian origin for the synagogue on the basis of architectural and functional parallels between the Egyptian Jewish proseuche and Egyptian pagan temples.21 Beyond citing various parallels meticulously enumerated by Dion some years earlier,22 e.g., the existence of a pylon (i.e., gateway) at the entrance to the building, a double colonnade, an adjacent grove, and an asylum, Griths points to the association of a place of worship with a place of learning (Per Ankh, the House of Life, a library, a place of certain religious rites)a feature that he claims links pagan and Jewish institutions in Hellenistic Egypt.23 Returning to a Judaean setting, Rivkin has suggested that the synagogue was a Pharisaic creation dating to the Hasmonean era.24 Given the far-ranging upheavals within Jewish society, resulting from a successful revolt and the attainment of political sovereignty several decades later, Rivkin argued that the synagogue reects many new trends and developments in Hasmonean society: Pharisaic ascendancy, emerging individualism, and democratization. Furthermore, he tried to turn the absence of any prior concrete data regarding the synagogue in Judaea to his advantage, asserting that Ben Siras failure to mention a synagogue at the beginning of the second century b.c.e. is a telling indication that such an institution did not exist at that time. Rivkin assumes that Ben Siras description of contemporary Jewish religious leadership and institutions is so detailed as to justify his argumentum ex silentio. Also relying heavily on the silence of Hellenistic Jewish sources, Grabbe revived a suggestion made earlier by, inter alia, Jost, Zunz, and Friedlnder, namely, that the Ju21. Griths, Egypt and the Rise of the Synagogue, 115; idem, Legacy, 102836. 22. Dion, Synagogues et temples, 4575. 23. The weakness of Griths argument is due not only to the very limited evidence available for such Egyptian temples. Even if one were to suppose that the Per Ankh served as a place of instruction, it appears to have been conned to priestly circles and focused heavily on funerary rites, including some sort of medical and cultic education as well; see Gardiner, House of Life, 15779; Grabbe, Judaism, I, 95. This is indeed a far cry from the practice of weekly scriptural readings for the entire Jewish community in the proseuche that included a gamut of topics found in the Torah and Prophets. Moreover, such a suggestion ignores any earlier traditions that the Jews might have brought with them from Judaea regarding the reading of Scriptures, e.g., Deuteronomy or Nehemiah 8. See in this regard the interesting remark made by Hecataeus, that the high priest Ezekias read to his friends from Scriptures that he brought from Judaea to Egypt in the late fourth century ( Josephus, Against Apion 1, 18789, and comments in A. Kasher, Josephus, Against Apion, I, 17981). For a more extensive critique of this theory, see my First-Century Synagogue. 24. Rivkin, Ben Sira and the Non-Existence of the Synagogue, 32048. This approach has also been adopted by Gutmann, Synagogue Origins, 34.
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daean synagogue is a late phenomenon. Since the earliest Judaean synagogue is attested only in the late rst century b.c.e., Grabbe concludes that the institution itself is postMaccabean.25 Indeed, both Jewish and pagan sources of the pre-Roman period fail to mention the existence of a Judaean synagogueneither Hecataeus of Abdera, Manetho, nor Mnaseas of Patara.26 Agatharchides (second century b.c.e.), in his description of religious practices specically in the Jerusalem Temple, observes the following:
The people known as Jews, who inhabit the most strongly fortied of cities, called by the natives Jerusalem, have a custom of abstaining from work every seventh day; on those occasions they neither bear arms nor take any agricultural operations in hand, nor engage in any other form of public service, but pray with outstretched hands in the temples until the evening [emphasis mineLL].27
The above reference to temples ( ) has been interpreted by some as referring to synagogues.28 However, it is more likely that the reference was indeed to the Jerusalem Temple and that the use of the plural here was inadvertent; pagan writers would have considered the use of the plural, temples, most natural. In any case, a well-known and oft-frequented religious setting in Jerusalem at that time could only have been the Temple, and praying all day with outstretched hands is rather unusual and would make some sense, if at all, in the Temple and not a synagogue setting. The only other possibility is that Agatharchides was referring to certain Diaspora synagogues, where Sabbath worship (though not necessarily praying with outstretched hands) might have lasted much or most of the day.29 However, this was most unlikely, and thus a Temple setting was undoubtedly intended.
25. Jost, Geschichte des Judenthums, III, 136; Zunz, Die Gottesdienstlichen Vortrge der Juden, 3; Friedlnder, Synagoge und Kirche, 53. (noting the synagogues rst appearance in Judaea); Grabbe, Synagogues in Pre-70 Palestine, 40110; idem, Judaism, II, 529. 26. See M. Stern, GLAJJ, passim. 27. Josephus, Against Apion 1, 209 (GLAJJ, I, 106109). 28. S. J. D. Cohen, Pagan and Christian Evidence, 16162; Feldman, Jew and Gentile, 159; A. Kasher, Josephus, Against Apion, I, 21415; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 412; Runesson, Origins, 34647. 29. See, for example, Philos Hypothetica 7, 13; and below, Chap. 4. 30. See also L. Levine, Nature and Origin, 42548, here modied; see below.
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or, more precisely, the lack of any solid evidence, such eorts have clearly become exercises in studied guesswork; as a result, prevailing theories on this subject range over a period of more than eight hundred years. With but few exceptions, these theories share several assumptions: that the religious component of the ancient synagogue was primary, and that dramatically new religious circumstances gave rise to this institution. Implicit in most of these theories is the view that some kind of liturgical activity, be it listening to a Divine prophecy, the recital of public prayer, or the introduction of scriptural readings, played a crucial and denitive role in the formation of the early synagogue. However, as noted at the outset of this chapter, the formative stages of a new phenomenon are very often not marked by any one moment of dramatic innovation. The synagogue may not have resulted from a crisis or a specic decision by one person or community to initiate something boldly new. We may well be dealing with a much more subtle and nuanced process that took place over decades, if not centuries, and operated at a dierent pace in various locales. Only at a later stage, when the synagogue had reached a sucient level of crystallization, could one look back and say that a novel institution had indeed been created. Thus, it may be helpful to revisit the question of origins from a dierent perspective. Instead of combing the earlier sources for clues regarding the time and place of the synagogues origins, I suggest a dierent starting point, namely, a period from which we have some solid evidence about the nature of the synagogue and how it functioned. Armed with what we know about the synagogue when it appears in the full light of history, we may then look to an earlier period and ask ourselves where such activities had once taken place. We may then have some clue as to how, why, and from where the institution referred to in the rst century as a synagogue (or as a proseuche somewhat earlier in Egypt) rst developed. A broad sociological and institutional approach may thus be warranted in trying to understand the synagogues origins rather than searching for a moment of national crisis or religious innovation that might have sparked its creation. Let us turn for a moment to the rst-century c.e. synagogue. In the following chapters we will discuss the characteristic features of the Second Temple synagogue in detail. As background for our present discussion, suce it to say that both the synagogue and the proseuche of this period were rst and foremost communal institutions where the entire gamut of activities connected with any Jewish community found expression. As documented in rst-century sources, the building might have been used as a courtroom, school, hostel, a place for political meetings, social gatherings, housing charity funds, a setting for manumissions, meals (sacred or otherwise), and, of course, a number of religious-liturgical functions.31 On the assumption, then, that the rst-century synagogue served as a center for a variety of communal as well as religious functions and activities, we now are in a position
31. See below, Chap. 5; and R. A. Horsley, Galilee, 22233.
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to look for the framework that served the same (or similar) purposes in earlier centuries. When seen in this light, it becomes clear that the location for most, if not all, of these activities in earlier times was the city-gate, the main communal setting in cities and towns in the biblical period.32 The city-gate as the focal point of communal activity is well attested in biblical and non-biblical literature.33 It served as a marketplace (II Kgs. 7:1), as well as a setting where a ruler would hold court and where prophets would speak (I Kgs. 22:10; Jer. 38:7).34 As the gate was a popular meeting-place for public gatherings, a variety of communal activities were conducted there. So, for example, Hezekiah appointed battle ocers over the people; then, gathering them to him in the square of the city-gate [ ,] he rallied them (II Chron. 32:6).35 Those who came regularly to the gate were the populace at large (see Ruth 3:11) and the town elders and leaders.36 The transaction between Abraham and Ephron the Hittite took place at the city-gate (Gen. 23:10, 18), and a number of legal documents from Nuzi conclude with the formula the tablet was written after the proclamation at the gate. 37 Announcement of the settlement of a negotiation at the gate aorded maximum pub32. This suggestion was proposed by Silber (following Lw, Gesammelte Schriften, IV, 5.) in his doctoral thesis at the University of Denver and was summarized by the same author in a pamphlet entitled The Origin of the Synagogue (1915). Silber, however, following Lw, dates this transition to the Solomonic period and further concludes that the synagogue was secular in origin, only later acquiring a distinct religious character. Decades later, the city-gate thesis was revisited by Hoenig (Ancient City-Square, 44876), who, however, confused the town square of Greco-Roman times with the city-gate of a Near Eastern setting (on this, see Ward-Perkins, Cities of Ancient Greece and Italy, 12) while freely utilizing later rabbinic material to supplement what little is known on the subject from pre-70 times. Moreover, much of his argument rests on the very problematic reading of reov ha-ir ( ) in place of the not uncommon reference to ever ha-ir ( ) in rabbinic literature. On the city-gate in biblical times, see Khler, Hebrische Mensch, 14371; de Vaux, Ancient Israel, 152 53; Encyclopaedia Biblica, VIII, 231; Frick, City in Ancient Israel, 7891; Kenyon, Royal Cities, 5761; and esp. Fritz, City in Ancient Israel, 3537, 13840. 33. CAD, A/1, 8288, s.v. abullu; ibid., B, 1920, s.v. babu; Frick, City in Ancient Israel, 8384, 114 27; Encyclopaedia Biblica, VIII, 23236; Otto, Zivile Funktionen, 18897. 34. Other references to rebuking the people at the gates include Isa. 29:21 and Amos 5:10. On the communal signicance of the city-gate, see Ephal and Naveh, Jar of the Gate, 5965. 35. On the discovery of such a square between the main and outer gates at the biblical site of Tel Dan, see Biran, Biblical Dan, 23549; idem, Tel Dan: Five Years Later, 177; idem, Dan, 32731; and below, notes 44 and 45. 36. See Prov. 31:23: Her husband is renowned at the city-gate [lit., gates], sitting among the elders of the land. See also ibid., 31:31. At times, people might come to the gate to simply spend time, socialize, and keep abreast of the latest news; see Esth. 4:6; II Kgs 7: 34. 37. See, for example, Pfeier and Speiser, One Hundred Nuzi Texts, 115. See also de Vaux, Patriarches hbreux, 25 and n. 1. The gates in Deut. 6:9 and 11:20 may refer to city-gates; see Tigay, Deuteronomy, 79.
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licity and signied the assent of the entire community, and meals marking the fulllment of a commandment (e.g., eating the tithe or food for the needy) were eaten there.38 Moreover, prophetic activity often took place there so as to reach the greatest number of people (Isa. 29:21; Amos 5:10). One of the primary activities at the city-gate was judiciary.39 City elders would assemble there to dispense justice: His father and mother shall take hold of him and bring him out to the elders of his town at the public place [i.e., the gate] of his community (Deut. 21:19; 17:5; 22:24; see also Ps. 69:13); and the prophet Amos advised: Hate evil and love good, and establish justice in the gate (5:15; see also Zech. 8:16). The importance of the city-gate as a place for settling personal aairs in the presence of the community is vividly reected in Ruth 4:12: Meanwhile, Boaz had gone to the gate and sat down there. And now the redeemer whom Boaz had mentioned passed by. He called, Come over and sit down here, So-and-so! And he came over and sat down. Then [Boaz] took ten elders of the town and said, Be seated here; and they sat down. 40 These ten elders (referred to by Speiser as city-fathers) undoubtedly convened there regularly to ociate as judges, arbitrators, and witnesses to business transactions.41 They were the civil judiciaryas opposed to the priestly judiciary of the Jerusalem Temple and the local sanctuaries.42 The gate as the heart of a city is also reected in the fact that a conqueror might place his throne there as a sign of his rule. Nebuchadnezzars ocers did so (Jer. 39:3) and thus fullled the prophets dire prediction (ibid., 1:1516): For I am summoning all the peoples of the kingdoms of the north, declares the Lord. They shall come, and shall each set up a throne before the gates of Jerusalem, against its walls roundabout, and against all the towns of Judah. And I will argue My case against them for all their wickedness. They have forsaken Me and sacriced to other gods and worshiped the works of their hands. 43 A king might sit at the city-gate to hear the peoples grievances. So, for example, following Absaloms death, Joab urged David to terminate his mourning and to sit at the
38. According to Deut. 26:12, the tithes given to the Levite, stranger, orphan, and widow on the third year of a sabbatical cycle were to be eaten at the city-gate. 39. See McKenzie, Judicial Procedure at the Town Gate, 100104. For rabbinic interpretations of biblical references to judicial proceedings at the city-gate, see Halivni (Weiss), Location of the Bet Din, 18191. 40. The concept of ten as a quorum appears in Josephus description of the Essenes (War 2, 146), at Qumran (CD 13, 1; 1QS 6:3; 6, 7; 10:14), and, of course, in later rabbinic literature (e.g., M Megillah 4, 3). 41. As in the story of Abraham and Ephron in Genesis 23. See Speiser, Coming and Going, 2023; Reviv, Early Elements and Late Terminology, 19091; and, for a dissenting opinion, G. Evans, Coming and Going, 2833. 42. Weinfeld, Deuteronomy, 235. One of the gates of Jerusalem under Josiah was named after Joshua, governor of the city (II Kgs. 23:8). 43. On the meting out of punishment against an entire city, see Deut. 13:17.
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gate so that all the troops could come before the king (II Sam. 19:89). On another occasion, Ahab, king of Israel, and Jehoshaphat, king of Judah, sat at the gate of Samaria prior to a battle in Gilead, summoning the prophets to support their venture (I Kgs. 22:10). Similarly, according to II Chron. 32:6, Hezekiah assembled the people at the city-gate to strengthen their resolve in the face of Sennacheribs imminent attack; a century or so later, we are told, Zedekiah also sat at a city-gate called Benjamin (Jer. 38:7). Lastly, the city-gate was also a place for performing religious functions. In the ancient Near East, people often gathered at the city-gate to worship gods, as is evidenced by the cultic objects found near the gates of Megiddo Va, Beersheba IV, Tel Dan, and Bethsaida.44 Regarding the city-gate at Tel Dan, Biran, following Barnett, notes that it may have been the site of religious ceremonies in antiquity:
We may consider this to be also a ceremonial route. This could depend to a certain extent on the interpretation of the unique structure found in the square between the outer and main gates. This structure is rectangular with an open space where a throne or pedestal was set. Two decorated column-bases were found in situ, a third in the debris and of the fourth only an imprint was left. . . . Our suggested reconstruction shows a canopied structure which could have served the king when he sat at the gate (e.g., I Kgs. 22:10) or it could have served as a pedestal for the statue of a god.45
In terms of explicit biblical evidence, II Kgs. 23:8 has the following to say about Josiahs reforms of 622/621 b.c.e.:
He brought all the priests from the towns of Judah [to Jerusalem] and deled the shrines where the priests had been making oeringsfrom Geba to Beer-sheba. He also demolished the shrines of the gates, which were at the entrance of the gate of Joshua, the city prefect which was on a persons left [as he entered] the city gate.
In the post-Exilic period, a gate area was utilized by Ezra and Nehemiah: The entire people assembled as one man in the square before the Water Gate, and they asked Ezra the scribe to bring the scroll of the Teaching of Moses with which the Lord had charged Israel (Neh. 8:1). Archaeological data conrm the fact that the biblical (i.e., Iron Age) gate was the site of many communal functions. In contrast to the early Middle Bronze Age II gate, which appears to have fullled much more of a defensive role, the twenty or so known Iron
44. See NEAEHL, I, 172 (Beersheba), 32729 (Dan). On Megiddo, see Herzog, Das Stadttor in Israel, 164; on Bethsaida, see below. On this subject generally, see Dever, Recent Archaeological Discoveries, 12862; and esp. Bernett and Keel, Mond, Stier und Kult am Stadttor, passim; Blomquist, Gates and Gods, 70131. 45. Biran, To the God Who Is in Dan, 143; see also Barnett, Bringing the God into the Temple, 1020; and Biran, Biblical Dan, 23845. The role of the city-gate in religious processions and ritual may well be reected in the words of Ps. 24:79: O gates, lift up your heads! . . . so the king of glory may come in!
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Age II gate complexes (ca. 1000580 b.c.e.) diered signicantly.46 Whereas gates in the second millennium had rooms usually separated by partition walls to serve as independent units, the Iron Age II gates had rooms that opened onto the main passagewayeither two, four, or six chambers, some large (in one instance, reaching 9 m. long) and often containing benches and stone water basins.47 These areas and, even more importantly, the adjacent open spaces, usually inside but at times outside the gate (in which case there was often another circumvallating wall), provided the setting for the many civil functions noted above.48 A striking example of a complex gate system is found at Tel Dan, built some time in the ninth century b.c.e., presumably by Ahab, where three gates (outer, main, and upper) were preceded by a paved square, a courtyard, and a royal processional way, respectively (g. 1). The latter two gates had four sentry rooms each.49 Perhaps an even more dramatic instance of city-gate cults has come to light at Bethsaida, on the north shore of the Sea of Galilee. At the northern tower, a stepped structure or podium, an iconic stele (a bulls head), a basin, and several vessels were found, and at the southern one, a niche. If the excavators identication of the site as a bama is correct, then Bethsaida would constitute a remarkable example of a gate cult. Four aniconic stelae found elsewhere in the gate complex only serve to reinforce this identication.50 G. Evans, who has collected much valuable material in this regard, recapitulates the importance of the city-gate as follows: A study of the texts in which the term appears shows clearly that the gate, together with the street which lay behind it, just within the walls, was a centre of political and legal activity, as well as of trade . . . the gate was the scene of many activities which, in a western city, were carried on in a central square. 51 McCown has summarized this phenomenon thusly: For the ancient Hebrew, the city
46. The subject has been addressed over the past several decades by Herzog in a series of studies, rst in Hebrew (The City-Gate in Eretz-Israel), then in German translation (see above, note 44), and more recently in English (Settlement and Fortication Planning, 26574; Archaeology of the City). See also E. Stern, Hazor, Dor and Megiddo, 1230. 47. Six-chambered gates have been discovered at Megiddo, azor, Gezer, Lachish, and Ashdod. Fourchambered gateways were found at Ashdod, Dan, Beersheba, Megiddo, and Dor, while two-chambered gateways were excavated at Dor, Mt. Gerizim, and Megiddo. See NEAEHL, passim; Fritz, City in Ancient Israel, 7778 (Dan), 81 (azor), 8896 (Megiddo), 104 (Lachish), 111 (Beersheba). See also E. Stern and Sharon, Tel Dor, 1986, 2037; and Magen, Mount Gerizim, 7376. On the controversial question, whether there are any chronological implications to the dierent-numbered chambers, see above, note 46. On the earlier Mesopotamian gate and its development from the third to rst millennia b.c.e., see Damerji, Development of the Architecture of Doors and Gates, 18198. 48. See also Encyclopaedia Biblica, VIII, 23743; and A. Mazar, Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 467 70. Esth. 4:6 speaks of a city square or street next to the Kings Gate. 49. Biran, Biblical Dan, 23553; Blomquist, Gates and Gods, 5767. 50. Arav and Freund, Bethsaida, II, 2542; Bernett and Keel, Mond, Stier und Kult am Stadttor, 17, 22 32; Blomquist, Gates and Gods, 4957. 51. G. Evans, Gates and Streets, 112 (cited from p. 1).
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
gate was much more than a means of ingress and egress, much more than an important part of the citys defenses. It was also the center (even though at one side) of the citys social, economic and judicial aairs. 52
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towers. The gate itself was no more than a passageway between these towers. This change may have been inspired by developments in Greek fortication systems in general, which themselves appear to have resulted from technological advances in the art of warfare, particularly the introduction of ballistae, catapults, and siege engines.55 While the gate area of third-century b.c.e. Marisa, on the southern coastal plain of Judaea, still boasted a square surrounded by buildings (an area evidently used for assorted religious, administrative, and military activities),56 gate areas from other Hellenistic sites in Israel reect this new pattern. So, for example, the gate at Dor changed dramatically, from the casemate-type wall, which had been in vogue for ve hundred years, to a simpler Hellenistic style, having no adjacent open areas, rooms, or separate buildings.57 Hellenistic building techniques are also evidenced in the Hellenistic town of Samaria-Sebaste,58 and by the rst century b.c.e., Herod was using this Hellenistic gate model at both Sebaste and Caesarea (g. 2).59 Although meagerly preserved, the Ginat gate in Jerusalem, discovered by Avigad, may also reect a similar Hellenistic model.60 On the basis of the above discussion, it becomes evident that most of the activities carried out within the context of the rst-century synagogue are already documented for the city-gate area in the First Temple period. By the Hellenistic period, when the biblical city-gate complex was transformed from a center of urban activity into a simple, functional gate for entrance and exit, the activities previously associated with the city-gate and the adjacent square were relocated to a building that eventually came to be known as the synagogue. An important caveat is in order here. A change in the function of the city-gate is documented for the Hellenistic period at certain sites located primarily in the coastal area of Judaea and relate almost exclusively to several pagan cities in this region (e.g., Dor). Whether other parts of the country were similarly aected at this time is unknown. We lack any kind of signicant archaeological evidence for Jewish settlements in Judaea and
55. See Shatzman, Ballistra Stones from Tel Dor, 94104; Sharon, Fortication of Dor, 10513; and, more generally, Winter, Greek Fortications, 22233, 32432; McNicoll, Hellenistic Fortications, 68, 4648, and esp. the concluding chapter written by Milner (pp. 20723); Shatzman, Res Militares, 184 96. See also idem, Artillery in Judaea, 46182. 56. Avi-Yonah, Maresha, 94851. The transitional character of Hellenistic Marisawith a heavy emphasis on its pre-Hellenistic oriental elementsis argued by G. Horowitz, Town Planning, 93111. 57. E. Stern et al., Excavations at Dor, I, 27778. See also idem, Walls of Dor, 1113; Sharon, Phoenician and Greek Ashlar Construction Techniques, 2142. 58. Crowfoot, Kenyon, and Sukenik, Buildings in Samaria, 2427. 59. Samaria-Sebaste: ibid., 31, 3941; Avigad, Samaria (City), 1307. On a round Hellenistic tower at Akko, similar to the one found at Samaria, see Dothan, Fortications of Ptolemais, 7174. Caesarea: Frova, Scavi di Caesarea Maritima, 24971. 60. Avigad, Discovering Jerusalem, 50, 69; see also Arav, Settlement Patterns, 159. At times, a freestanding gate was built with no accompanying walls, as in rst-century c.e. Tiberias; see NEAEHL, IV, 1470 71.
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their fortications during the Persian and Hellenistic periods. The fact that Jerusalem had a wall at this time is amply documented (e.g., Neh. 23; Josephus, War 5, 14255), and we have had occasion to note that Ezra and Nehemiah gathered the people at the citys Water Gate for the public reading of Scriptures. Nevertheless, we have no inkling what this Jerusalem gate area might have looked like or if, in fact, it was a city-gate rather than an internal one serving the Temple precincts. Besides Jerusalem, we have no information regarding other Judaean towns or villages.61 It is quite possible that many, if not most, of these places had no fortications whatsoever at this time and that communal activities had already been taking place earlier in an outdoor framework or, in the course of time, inside a public building such as the synagogue.62 The implications of the above discussion point to the fact that, in contrast to the communis opinio, the emergence of the Judaean synagogue was not the outcome of any specic event or crisis but rather a gradual development during the Persian and Hellenistic
61. On the paucity of archaeological material for this period, especially in the hinterland, and on Persias general policy of limiting urban fortications, see Ahlstrm, History of Ancient Palestine, 82829; E. Stern, Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 46168. 62. Here I am modifying the suggestion for a specically Hellenistic dating of the synagogues origin argued in my article Nature and Origin. In some places, it might have crystallized earlier. The import of the lack of physical evidence for specically Jewish centers was not fully realized then, and therefore a Persian context is also possible.
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periods. It is impossible to oer a specic date for the process that transpired at various paces some time between the fth and rst centuries b.c.e. 63 What may be no more than a fortuitous circumstance, the structure at Gamla, which has been generally regarded as one of the earliest known synagogue buildings in Judaea dating to the late rst century b.c.e., seems to reect the earlier city-gate tradition (g. 3). Located neither in the middle of the settlement nor on a particularly high spot, as were many village synagogues in later centuries, this synagogue was situated at the eastern edge of the town, between two main streets and near what was undoubtedly the entrance to the city.64 Had Gamla existed centuries earlier, a city-gate area might well have been
63. The assumption that the synagogue evolved from a communal setting such as the biblical citygate may also explain the association of the azzan with this institutionat least as attested in later rabbinic sources. In the ancient Near East, the azzan functioned as a city administrator, chief magistrate, or mayor (as was Arad-Khipa of Jerusalem and other local Canaanite rulers as mentioned in the el-Amarna letters); see Neeman, Contribution of the Amarna Letters, 2021; he is also mentioned as a religious functionary in early antiquity, e.g., the Babylonian hazzanu of a temple, although this position appears to have been derivative. It is possible that the azzan, who became a permanent xture in the later synagogue, was formerly associated with a village or town (i.e., city-gate) context; however, no source makes this connection explicit. On the hazzanu in the ancient Near East, see Weisberg, Guild Structure, 93; Kaufman, Akkadian Inuences, 55; Menzel, Assyrische Tempel, I, 289; II, 232 nn. 386465; CAD, II, 163 65. For an example of the religious dimension of this term, see Waterman, Royal Correspondence, I, 25455 (Letter 366). 64. Gutman, Synagogue at Gamla, 3034; idem, Gamala, 45963. As can be seen at the site, the synagogue is located adjacent to the city fortications. It should be noted, however, that Gamlas wall was added only in the mid-rst century c.e. in preparation for the war against Rome.
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located there. The structure at Gamla, then, would have preserved vestiges of the earlier tradition of communal public space, located at or near the entrance to the city.
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priests (and other lay representatives) ociated in the Temple during an assigned week.69 According to the Mishnaha late source for our purposes but, in this instance, probably reecting Second Temple practicea portion of the Scriptures was read publicly in the town or village on each day of that week: The ordinary Jews [non-priests and nonLevites] associated with each priestly division would gather in their towns and read [the scriptural section dealing with] the creation story [Gen. 12:4]. 70 This mishnah is valuable to our discussion on three counts: (1) it attests to the early practice of Torah reading in a local setting;71 (2) it tells us that the reading was performed by the community at large, in this case by those unable to participate in the Temple worship in Jerusalem; (3) a synagogue per se is not mentioned, but a general reference is made to gathering in towns. Although later renditions of this tradition, followed by most commentators, freely introduce the notion that these scriptural readings took place in the local synagogue,72 such interpretations are wholly gratuitous. The mishnah mentions only towns, and the specic Sitz im Leben may have been the gate area or some other public space.73
69. On the division into twenty-four courses of priests, Levites, and Israelites, see Schrer, History, II, 24550; S. Safrai, Pilgrimage, 21720; Sperber, Mishmarot and Maamadot, 8993; see also Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 19092. On the formative period of this institution, see also Liver, Chapters in the History of the Priests and Levites, 3352, esp. pp. 4952. On one of the Temple roles of the head of a maamad, see M Tamid 5, 6 (cf. also M Sotah 1, 5). 70. M Taanit 4, 2; see comments by Albeck, Mishnah, II, 49596. At rst glance, there seems to be little connection between the reading of the creation story and the Temple service. Two possible explanations come to mind: 1. The association may derive from the apparent connection between the building of the Tabernacle (Exod. 2540) and the creation story, on the one hand, i.e., the subdivision of the former into seven parts (six deal with the actual process of building, i.e., with creation, and the last with the Sabbath law), and, on the other hand, the completion of the Tabernacle on New Years Day (Exod. 40:17), traditionally associated with the Sabbath after the Creation. In other verses as well the Sabbath is associated with the Temple (Lev. 19:30; 26:2). Such a connectionalready made in rabbinic sourcesmay also explain why the period of service for each priestly course extended from Sabbath to Sabbath, reminiscent of the week of creation. See Cassuto, Commentary on Exodus, 33435, 447.; Weinfeld, Sabbath Temple and the Enthronement of the Lord, 50112; Sarna, Exploring Exodus, 196220. 2. In rabbinic literature, there is a tradition that the creation of the world began on the Temple Mount, on its foundation stone ( .) A related tradition speaks of Adam being created from the dust of the Temple Mount, where he was later buried. The Christians knew of this tradition and subsequently transferred Adams burial spot to Golgotha, in reaction to which later rabbinic sources claim he was buried in the Cave of Machpelah in Hebron. See Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, I, 12; V, 1416, 12526; Gafni, Pre-Histories of Jerusalem, 1016. See also Terrien, Omphalos Myth, 31538. 71. The division into maamadot was already known to the author of I Chronicles (24:118) in the fourth or third century b.c.e., and the customs described in the mishnah may well have crystallized as early as this time. 72. See, for example, B Taanit 27b. See also Albeck, Mishnah, II, 341; Schrer, History, II, 293. 73. A number of scholars have viewed the maamadot ceremony as the setting from which the syna-
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Of particular interest in the above-cited mishnah is the fact that the local Torahreading ceremony of the maamad was clearly parallel to the Temple ritual, i.e., it was meant to serve as a substitute for those unable to be in Jerusalem. As noted, the emergence and evolution of the synagogue have been viewed in the past as a competitive development vis--vis the Jerusalem Temple, and many have even characterized the synagogue as a Pharisaic institution that emerged in response to the Sadducean-run Temple.74 Howgogue as we know it emerged. See, for example, Hruby, Die Synagoge, 1617; Bowker, Targums and Rabbinic Literature, 910; Zeitlin, Rise and Fall of the Judaean State, I, 179; Petuchowski, Liturgy of the Synagogue, 46. On the textual and historical issues of this post-70 ceremony, see D. Levine, Communal Fasts and Rabbinic Sermons, 6696, 10319. Another early rabbinic tradition that may have a bearing on the role of a public space in Second Temple towns and villages is found in M Bikkurim 3, 2, where the following ritual of bringing rstfruits to the Temple is described: How do they bring up [to Jerusalem] the rstfruits? All the villages in the [area of the] maamad gather together in the maamads city and lodge in the city square [plaza or gate area, ] and they would not enter the houses and early in the morning the person in charge would say, Let us arise and go up to Zion, to [the house of ] the Lord our God ( Jer. 31:5). Perhaps of signicance is the fact that the Tosefta (Bikkurim 2, 8 [p. 292]) speaks of the azzanim of the synagogue accompanying the processions to Jerusalem. Finally, the mishnaic tradition of public fast-day ceremonies conducted in the public square may also have a bearing on the question at hand (M Taanit 2; T Taanit 1, 813 [pp. 32528]; and later parallels). However, the specic literary tradition that has been preserved appears to be a second-century c.e. version, to wit, the mention of a nasi and av bet din, the recitation of an elaborate Amidah prayer (M Taanit 2, 24), and the reference to a particular incident and specic sages of this time (ibid., 2, 5; T Taanit 1, 13 [pp. 32728]). 74. The list of scholars making this assumption is long and impressive. For a sampling, see Herford, Pharisees, 88109; R. M. Grant, Historical Introduction to the New Testament, 27475; Tcherikover, Hellenistic Civilization, 12425 (referring to scribes instead of Pharisees); Hengel, Judaism and Hellenism, I, 82; idem, Pre-Christian Paul, 57; Hengel and Deines, E. P. Sanders Common Judaism, 3233; Gutmann, Synagogue Origins, 4; Hanson, People Called, 353. Flesher (Palestinian Synagogues, 28) has similarly posited a sharp contrast between the priestly Temple cult and the synagogue, although without Pharisaic-Sadducean overtones. Cf., however, Saldarini, Pharisees, Scribes and Sadducees, 5253; Grabbe, Synagogues in Pre-70 Palestine, 4089; G. F. Moore, Judaism, I, 28687; Finkelstein, Pharisees, 568 69; Perrot, Reading of the Bible, 150; and Schaper, Pharisees, 421. Given the assumed spiritual prominence of the Pharisees in Jewish life of the Second Temple period and the universality of the synagogue as a religious institution, it was more than natural in the past to posit Pharisaic dominance and inuence over the synagogue. In no small part, the polemics of the New Testament were responsible for this misconception, pitting Jesus against the Pharisees, often in a synagogal context (Matt. 12:14; 23:16). Primarily, however, these views reect the ongoing belief that the Pharisees determined the normative religious tradition in the Second Temple period. This point of view has in large measure been rejected today; see, for example, M. Smith, Palestinian Judaism, 7381; Aune, Orthodoxy in First Century Judaism? 110; S. J. D. Cohen, From the Maccabees to the Mishnah, 16064; idem, Were Pharisees and Rabbis? 89105; Grabbe, Synagogues in Pre-70 Palestine, 4089; E. P. Sanders, Judaism, 4772, 380412. If, then, Pharisaic Judaism was not normative, and if many literary compositions of the Second Temple period often ascribed to them by modern scholars are, in fact, not theirs (e.g.,
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ever, the truth of the matter is, the Pharisees had little or nothing to do with the early synagogue, and there is not one shred of evidence pointing to a connection between the two. No references associate the early Pharisees (the Pairs and others) with the synagogue, nor is there anything in early synagogue liturgy that is particularly Pharisaic. A possible connection between the judicial process once conducted at the city-gate and the synagogue may be found in the book of Susannah. The focus of this story is a meeting attended by elders and townspeople for the purpose of adjudication. According to the Septuagint version, the trial took place in the synagogue (); the revised version of Theodotion merely states that the people assembled. 75 Scholars generally regard the Septuagint tradition as older and assume that it had a Semitic Vorlage of Palestinian provenance, and that it was probably composed in the Persian or, more likely, Hellenistic period.76 Thus, we may have here an early attestation of the term synagogue, referring either to a separate building or an outdoor area that served as the setting for a major communal activity.77 An advanced stage in the transition to a synagogue building can justiably be dated to the late Hellenistic or early Roman period, i.e., the rst century b.c.e., from when the earliest archaeological remains of synagogues appear (see below, Chap. 3). Our argument hereunfortunately, but of necessityrests heavily on the lack of evidence. Had the synagogue been a known and recognized institution in Judaean society, one might well have expected it to be mentioned at least once in the many literary works of the third to rst centuries b.c.e. 78 Yet, despite his numerous references to Jewish elites and religious institutions of the day, Ben Sira takes no note of it. We also might have expected I and II Maccabees to comment on the impact of Antiochus persecutions on the functioning of synagogues, had they existedyet, they do not. Purity laws, circumcision, the Sabbath, festivals, kashrut, and, of course, the Temple are all mentioned, but not a word is said about the synagogue.79 Compare this silence to descriptions of rst-century c.e.
on the Psalms of Solomon; see ODell, Religious Background of Psalms, 24157; see also E. P. Sanders, Paul, 4024), then there is little justication in speaking of their control over the local synagogues. 75. Charles, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, I, 649; C. A. Moore, Daniel, Esther and Jeremiah: Additions, 1014. 76. C. A. Moore, Daniel, Esther and Jeremiah: Additions, 9192. 77. The reference in Matt. 6:5 to those who pray in the synagogues and on the street corners is intriguing and has been the basis of much speculation. However, there are too many unknowns in the above statement for it to be of much use. In the rst place, the passage in Matthew may be referring to private, and not communal, prayer. Secondly, the statement may be referring to the exception rather than the rule. It might be interpreted that such behavior is typical of the arrogant and insincere and that ordinary people do not and should not act thusly. 78. For the literature dating to this period, see Nickelsburg, Jewish Literature, 71160; Hengel, Judaism and Hellenism, I, 110.; M. Stone, Apocalyptic Literature. 79. I Macc. 1, 4164; II Macc. 6.
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pogroms and anti-Jewish incidents in both Judaea and the Diaspora, where the synagogue featured prominently in the writings of both Josephus and Philo.80 The same silence permeates the books of Tobit and Jubilees, the Letter of Aristeas, the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs, the book of Enoch, and elsewhere. The synagogue as a place of worship or central communal institution in Jewish life is nowhere to be detected. Similarly, third- and second-century b.c.e. non-Jewish writers who describe the Jewish sceneparticularly its religious componentomit all reference to this institution.81 When the word synagogue does, in fact, appear in the late second-century b.c.e. book of I Maccabees, it refers to a group of people: an assembly of asidim (2, 42), an assembly of scribes (7, 12), or the large national assembly ( ) that acclaimed Simon the Maccabee as ruler in 141 b.c.e. (14, 28).82 In the Septuagint, the term invariably refers to a congregation as a whole and not a meeting-place.83
CONCLUDING REMARKS
From our discussion above, we may safely conclude that the synagogue as a distinct and recognizable institution began to crystallize owing to a shift in urban planning. The earlier setting for the synagogues many functions was the biblical city-gate, with its manifold activities. This setting served as such throughout Canaan and the Near East for centuries, if not for a millennium or more, and thus biblical Israel was adopting a well-known model. The later move into a building in place of the open-air city-gate setting was likewise a not unfamiliar phenomenon in the Hellenistic age. Within Jewish society, this move constituted the beginnings of the institution that became known as the synagogue. The shift from the city-gate as a center of activity to a setting within the city may have aected Jerusalem and its Temple as well. One of the striking aspects of the rst-century
80. See below, Chaps. 3 and 4. This line of argument must, however, be tempered for the pre-rstcentury c.e. Egyptian Jewish literary sources likewise make no mention of a proseuche in the Hellenistic period, although that institution is well attested in epigraphical and papyrological sources. 81. This point has already been noted on numerous occasions in the previous two centuries, at the very least from the time of Bauer (Beschreibung, II, pp. 125., down to Rivkin, Ben Sira and the NonExistence of the Synagogue, 32054). The interpretation of Ps. 74:8 (they burned all Gods tabernacles in the land) as a reference to the destruction of synagogues during the Antiochan persecutions is hardly accepted today (see Goldstein, I Maccabees, 138 n. 208). 82. See my Jerusalem, 99101. 83. See TDNT, VIII, 805. It may be precisely for this reason, i.e., the association in Second Temple literature of the word synagogue with congregation, that the word also came to be applied to a building that housed communal activities. That the synagogue building belonged to the community as a whole is clearly attested in early rabbinic tradition; see, for example, M Nedarim 5, 5; T Bava Metzia 11, 23 (p. 125); Lieberman, TK, IX, 320; Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a; Y Yevamot 12, 13a; Genesis Rabbah 81, 1 (pp. 969 72); and below, Chap. 10.
origins
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Jerusalem Temple is the fact that it had become the hub of various activities not only for those living within the city but also for Jews throughout Judaea and beyond. More precisely, it was on the Temple Mount that a wide variety of social, political, religious, judicial, and economic functions took place.84 Never before had the Temple area functioned in such a comprehensive capacity. When did this plethora of functions move to the Temple Mount area? It, too, may have occurred with the disappearance of the city-gate as a place of assembly and the subsequent establishment of a vibrant Temple Mount area. There can be little doubt that the Hasmonean renovations on the Temple Mount, and most certainly Herods enlargement of the area to twice its former size, were done not only to accommodate the increased numbers of pilgrims or to satisfy personal ambitions, but also to house the new functions envisioned for the Temple Mount. When Herod planned this area architecturally as a Hellenistic temenos on the one hand and as the equivalent of a Greek agora or Roman forum on the other, he was, in fact, centralizing in this public area activities once conducted in other parts of the city, primarily the city-gate area. This development thus coincided with the wider relocation of communal functions from city-gates to other settings, as was the trend elsewhere in the Hellenistic East. If, indeed, this assumption is to be granted, it might then explain a number of interesting and hitherto enigmatic phenomena, such as the ceremonial reading of the Torah within the Temple precincts. This was the only formal liturgical activity not specically associated with sacrices (in contrast to the levitical psalms, which were meant to accompany the sacricial ritual) that took place there. Annually on Yom Kippur, as well as on the Sukkot festival at the end of each sabbatical year ( ,Haqhel, in Deut. 31), the high priest would read from the Torah in public.85 Such proceedings were clearly ancillary to the Temples main agenda and, as such, were conducted in the Womens Court and not in the Priests Court, thus opening this activity to a wider public gathered in the Temple precincts. It is quite possible that the Temple Haqhel ceremony, at least, might have been a carryover from the earlier city-gate setting and paralleled the Torah-reading ceremony that was developing in the synagogue at this time. Given the possible shift of venue from Jerusalems city-gate to the Temple Mount, the puzzling mention of two functionaries, the rosh knesset ( ) and azzan knesset ( ,) with regard to these Torah-reading ceremonies may also gain a measure of clarity. Among the references to the synagogue in the rst centuries c.e., rabbinic literature specically notes these two ocials in connection with this ceremony.86 Might such
84. L. Levine, Jerusalem, 21953. 85. M Yoma 7, 1; M Sotah 7, 8; see also M Tamid 5, 3. 86. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 359); T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273). In the Temple setting, both the azzan knesset and rosh knesset were subordinate to the priestly hierarchy; in the newly developing synagogue, these roles were destined to become central. For literature in this regard, see above, note 63.
44
ocials have once held pivotal roles in city-gate aairs, including religious activities, and could these roles have then been transferred to the Temple and synagogue settings? Finally, our suggestion regarding the evolution of the synagogue has implications regarding its relationship with the Temple. As noted above, it is totally unwarranted to view the synagogue as a rival of the Temple.87 Throughout the Second Temple period, at least in Judaea, the synagogue was never endowed with any special sanctity or halakhic importance,88 and in several sources priests themselves were prominent in synagogue aairs as well.89 There is simply no evidence of any inherent conict between these two institutions, and priestly participation and leadership in synagogues simply reect the role they played as religious and communal leaders at the time. The supposition that the synagogue began emerging (socioreligiously, if not architecturally) in the course of the early Second Temple period, some time in the Persian or Hellenistic period, would also go a long way toward explaining the development of the Jewish proseuche in Egypt and some of its salient features, including the considerable inuence of Ptolemaic models. The Jews who settled in Egypt and elsewhere in the early Hellenistic period had no concrete, established framework for communal activities, which in Judaea had taken place at the city-gate or in a village public space. In adapting to a new environment and in seeking a setting for their communal functions, the Jews in Egypt and throughout the Diaspora looked to their immediate surroundings for suitable models.90 There is little to be gained in arguing whether the synagogue originated in Judaea or the Diaspora. In fact, the institution evolved in both places more or less simultaneously, under varying circumstances and for very dierent reasons. For the Jews of Judaea, there was a need to nd an alternative to the city-gate area, now fast disappearing, or to the village open-air setting, which was gradually being replaced by closed public buildings. For Jews in the Hellenistic and Roman Diaspora, use of the city-gate area in a pagandominated town or city was impossible. It was thus imperative to create a framework within which the Jewish community could preserve its communal identity and give expression to social and religious needs. Under these varying circumstances the synagoge and proseuche were born.
87. Contra Flesher, in Palestinian Synagogues, 2739. See my comments below, Chap. 3. 88. S. J. D. Cohen, Temple and the Synagogue, 15174. 89. See E. P. Sanders, Judaism, 17082; and below, Chaps. 35. 90. See below, Chap. 4.
three
PRE-70 JUDAEA
o pre-70 source addresses the nature or functions of the Judaean synagogue systematically.1 In contrast to the Temple, the synagogue merited relatively little attention; we have few sources on how synagogues functioned, where they were located, or how they lookedaspects about which Josephus and the Mishnah supply a plethora of information with regard to the Temple.2
1. We have been using the name Judaea for the pre-70 period, as this was the ocial title of the Roman province at the time. Only in the wake of the Bar-Kokhba revolt in 135 c.e. did Hadrian rename it SyriaPalaestina, a change that will be reected in later chapters by use of the name Palestine. It should be noted that the name Judaea had a dual meaning in the pre-70 eraa limited reference to the southern part of the country (as against Samaria, Galilee, and Peraea) and a broader one relating to the entire province. See M. Stern, GLAJJ, I, 23334, 290; II, 1115, 16870, 21720; Feldman, Some Observations on the Name of Palestine, 614; and Schrer, History, I, 514. We shall distinguish between the two meanings by using the spelling Judea for the more limited geographical area, and Judaea for the province as a whole. 2. Josephus, War 5, 184237; idem, Antiquities 15, 380425; M Middot; M Sheqalim. Studies on the Jerusalem Temple based on these sources and archaeological evidence are abundant; see, for example, Hildesheimer, Die Beschreibung des herodianischen Tempels, 132; Hollis, Archaeology of Herods Temple; Simons, Jerusalem in the Old Testament; Vincent and Stve, Jrusalem de lAncien Testament; Busink, Der Tempel von Jerusalem; E. P. Sanders, Judaism, 47118; and L. Levine, Jerusalem, 21953 and bibliography cited therein. An interesting example of this imbalance is the Roman practice of oering gifts to the Jerusalem
46
As noted, the synagogue at this time had no halakhic or religious standing; it was a communal institution and, as such, merited no special status and consequently little attention.3 Nevertheless, the picture is not entirely negative. Almost a score of synagogues in rst-century c.e. Judaea are attested, especially in the literary sources; however, they are mentioned only en passant within the given agenda of each particular source.4 These include references in Josephus writings (Tiberias, Dor, and Caesarea), the New Testament (Nazareth, Capernaum, and Jerusalem), rabbinic literature (Jerusalem), and the Damascus Document (Qumran and presumably elsewhere as well). Six sites have yielded archaeological evidence for the rst century, the well-known remains from Gamla, Masada, Herodium, and Jerusalem, and two recently discovered buildings at Qiryat Sefer and Modiin in western Judaea (a possible additional site has been suggested at orvat Etri, south of Bet Shemesh). The designation of several other archaeological sites as synagogues is far less certain (Capernaum, Migdal, Chorazim, northern Jerusalem, and Jericho). Although this material is scattered throughout the entire province of Judaea, a concentration of nds exists in the Galilee (including the Golan), the Judaean Desert, and the Shephelah.5 Let us review this evidence region by region.
Temple; no comparable gesture is known regarding the pre-70 synagogue. See, for example, Philo, Embassy 157, 297, 319; Josephus, War 5, 562; idem, Antiquities 16, 14; 18, 122. 3. S. J. D. Cohen, Temple and the Synagogue, 15274. 4. It is dicult to view the term hieroi in War 4, 408, as referring to synagogues (per Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 12230). That the Sicarii would carry out a general destruction of synagogues would be strange indeed, as is the reference to cities attacked by the Zealots. Despite the diculty in assuming that there were such pagan temples in Judea, it is more likely that Josephus did, in fact, have such buildings in mind and that he was referring to greater Judaea, including pagan areas. Another possible reference to such structures may be found in War 1, 277, and its parallel in Antiquities 14, 374. 5. For most of the sites discussed below, see also Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 155204. 6. Evidence from each gospel is referred to respectively: Mark 1:2128, 39; 3:1; 6:2 (for other settings in Jesus ministry according to Mark, see Rhoads and Michie, Mark as Story, 6372); Matt. 4:23; 9:35; Luke 4:1544; 13:1021; John 6:3559; 18:20. See also Schwartzman, How Well Did the Synoptic Evangelists Know? 11532.
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been noted, he seems to have studiously avoided contact with cities)7 all appear to have had synagogues, whatever their size, location, or social-religious conguration. Jesus visits to these synagogues on the Sabbath were clearly timed so as to aord him maximum exposure among the local population, or at least the gospel narratives purport to convey this message. Unique among rst-century sources, the gospel narratives focus on the healing eected within the synagogue. Miracle-working activity was far from uncommon in antiquity generally and in Judaea specically.8 Exorcising demons, performing wonders, making miraculous signs, and healing the sick within the context of the synagogue would not have been considered unusual given the institutions centrality in Jewish communal life. What is highlighted in these narratives, however, is not only the nature and extent of this practice, but also the fact that it took place on the Sabbath. It is this timing that was controversial and thus became a bone of contention between Jesus and some of those present. In one case he is reportedly criticized by the archisynagogue, in another by the Pharisees.9 The gospel authors appear to have emphasized a common rural phenomenon, i.e., healing, in order to highlight Jesus charisma and popularity. The historical value of this New Testament literature regarding the rst-century Judaean scene has been called into question of late. It has been suggested that all the gospels, Matthew perhaps excepted, were written in the Diaspora and thus may reect a late rstcentury c.e. reality, i.e., the Diaspora synagogue familiar to the authors, who then projected this later setting onto the earlier rst-century Galilee.10 Moreover, the literary and theological agendas of each gospel have raised further doubts as to the materials historical credibility. However, in our case at least, such skepticism should be regarded with extreme caution. Although the gospels and Acts, those writings most relevant to the subject at hand, may have originated in the Diaspora, they are not so distant chronologically from Jesus setting; the dierence between the latter part of the rst century c.e. and ca. 30 c.e. is but a generation or two. Furthermore, it is not at all clear that a Diaspora setting had an impact on these accounts. All the gospels, no matter when or where they were written, report much the same information regarding the Galilean synagogues. How might we explain this coincidence? Are we to assume that all Diaspora synagogues, whether in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, or elsewhere, shared identical features? This, as we will see below
7. Freyne, Galilee, Jesus and the Gospels, 13555; R. A. Horsley, Galilee, 158255; Edwards, SocioEconomic and Cultural Ethos, 5373. See also Freyne, Urban-Rural Relations, 7591. On urban-rural relations generally in the Empire, see MacMullen, Roman Social Relations, 2856. 8. Kee, Miracle in the Early Christian World, 14670; Freyne, Galilee, Jesus and the Gospels, 22739; and especially Aune, Magic in Early Christianity, 150757. See also E. P. Sanders, Jesus and Judaism, 157 73; M. Smith, Jesus the Magician, 6893; and Crossan, Historical Jesus, 30332. 9. Luke 13:14; Matt. 12:14, respectively. 10. See, for example, Kee, Transformation of the Synagogue, 18.
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(Chap. 4), was almost certainly not the case; Diaspora synagogues varied considerably from region to region. Moreover, even were we to assume the existence of some sort of overriding unity among the far-ung rst-century Diaspora synagogues, might it not be warranted, then, to assume that Judaean synagogues shared in that commonality? Moreover, there is a signicant amount of corroboration between the New Testament evidence and other information relating to rst-century Judaea. For example, Acts refers to Diaspora Jewrys synagogues in Jerusalem, a presence reected in rabbinic literature and the Theodotos inscription as well (see below). The centrality of scriptural readings in the synagogue (viz., Luke 4) is echoed by the Theodotos inscription, Philo, Josephus, and several early rabbinic traditions (e.g., T Megillah 3 [p. 359]). Finally, we might wonder why New Testament writers would attribute a Diaspora synagogue setting to Jesus time if such an institution had no place in the Galilee. It appears rather unlikely that all the gospel writers would refer time and again to Jesus activity in an institution that never (or barely) existed in his time.11 The assumption, then, that there were no synagogue buildings in Galilean towns and villages in the rst century appears unwarranted.12 That such buildings existed throughout Judaea at the time is now well attested for Jerusalem and other parts of the province. Moreover, the recent archaeological discoveries at Qiryat Sefer and Modiin provide us with examples of village synagogues in western Judaea. Whether such evidence is to be found in every village is unknown, but this is probably not the case. Smaller settlements may have made do with a village square or someones home, but this is mere speculation.
Nazareth
Jesus appearance in his hometown synagogue is mentioned in each of the synoptic gospels.13 It was a memorable occasion, and it is precisely his appearance in his patris that determined the nature and course of this particular narrative. The accounts in Matthew (13:5358) and Mark (6:16)14 are similar: Jesus teaches at the local synagogue; those gathered are astonished by his words and deeds; he is immediately identied by those as-
11. That the gospel writers have been characterized of late less as historians and more as theologians and literary writers should not be given undue weight for our particular purposes; see Conzelmann, Theology of St. Luke, 3438; Talbert, Literary Patterns, contra H. Anderson, Broadening Horizons, 26174. It is rather safe to assume that even those writers using historical data in a supposedly biographical or historical narrative (e.g., Luke-Acts) would include as much reliable data as possible to make the account convincing. So, for example, Luke 1:14: It seems good to me . . . to write an orderly account. Regarding the inclusion of very early (and thus relatively authentic and historical) material in much of Lukes narrative, see Schurmann, Lukasevangelium, 223.; Ringe, Jesus, Liberation and the Biblical Jubilee, 4245, 1079; and Chilton, God in Strength, 12132. 12. See Groh, Stratigraphic Chronology, 5760; R. A. Horsley, Galilee, 22526. 13. Temple, Rejection at Nazareth, 22942. 14. See Perrot, Jsus Nazareth, 4049.
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sembled as the carpenters son, the son of Mary, brother of James, Joseph, Simon, Judas, and his sisters. We are told that those gathered were highly oended, although the reason for this is not made clear. Jesus reply that a prophet is not without honor except in his own country [i.e., hometown] and in his own house (Mark adds: among his own kin) may well be what triggered the above account. Both gospel pericopes add that owing to his townsmens disbelief, Jesus did not succeed in performing miracles there. Mark notes that Jesus nevertheless managed to heal some sick people. Lukes account of Jesus visit to the Nazareth synagogue is markedly dierent from the other gospel accounts, so much so that it has been suggested, in a harmonizing fashion, that Jesus made two dierent visits to Nazareth, one described in Mark and Matthew, the other in Luke.15 Whatever the case, the importance of Lukes pericope cannot be overestimated for our understanding of the rst-century Galilean synagogue.16
And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up: and, as was his custom, he went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day and stood up to read. And he was handed the book of the prophet Isaiah. And when he had opened the book, he found the place where it was written, The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because He has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives, and recover the sight to the blind, to set at liberty those that are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord [Isa. 61:12].17 And he closed the book, and he gave it back to the attendant, and sat down. And the eyes of all those in the synagogue were xed on him. And he began to say unto them, Today this scripture is fullled in your ears. And all spoke well of him, and wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth. And they said, Is this not Josephs son? And he said unto them, You will surely quote me the proverb, Physician, heal yourself : what we have heard you did in Capernaum, do also here in your own country. And he said, Truly, I say to you, no prophet is accepted in his own country. But I tell you in truth, many widows were in Israel
15. Luke 4:1630; Perrot, Jsus Nazareth, 47. See also Lagrange, Lvangile, 123, 201. The gospels themselves do not know of two visits. Alternatively, the account in Luke may be a rewriting or reworking of Mark 16 (see Leaney, Commentary, 5152; Bultmann, History of the Synoptic Tradition, 3132), honed to t Lukes theology (Conzelmann, Theology of St. Luke, 3438) and part of Lukes programmatic agenda (Brawley, Luke-Acts and the Jews, 1112; cf. J. T. Sanders, Jews in Luke-Acts, 16468). See also Kmmel, Introduction, 13051. 16. See, for example, Finkel, Jesus Sermon at Nazareth, 10615; idem, Jesus Preaching, 32541; H. Anderson, Broadening Horizons, 25975; Combrink, Structure and Signicance of Luke 4:16 30, 2747; Perrot, Luc 4:1630 et la lecture biblique, 32440 and bibliography in n. 11; J. T. Sanders, From Isaiah 61 to Luke 4, 75106; Chilton, Announcement in Nazara, 14772; C. A. Evans, Luke, 70 76; Monshouwer, Reading of the Prophet, 9099; Tyson, Images of Judaism, 5962. On the date and authorship of Luke, see Fitzmyer, Gospel according to Luke, 3562. 17. This passage is used also in Matt. 11:45 and Luke 7:22. The verses in our present context have been carefully edited by excluding some phrases, incorporating a clause from Isa. 58:6, and generally following the Septuagint version. See R. A. Horsley, Jesus and the Spiral of Violence, 25051.
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This passage is far longer and more detailed than its parallels and seems to have been deliberately placed by Luke at the very beginning of Jesus career. Mark and Matthew, in contrast, place their versions of the Nazareth incident later in Jesus Galilean ministry.19 The positioning of this tradition is clearly of signicance for Lukes account; he obviously intends to use Jesus inaugural address in Nazareth to set forth the main themes of his gospel and its companion volume, Acts.20 As regards the synagogue itself in this account, a number of details are noteworthy. According to Luke, Jesus was accustomed to go to the synagogue on the Sabbath, either as an ordinary participant, a preacher, or a healer; other gospel traditions bear this out. Certain stages of the synagogue liturgy are noted: Jesus stood up to read from the Prophets, was handed the book of Isaiah, read several verses, returned the book to the synagogue ocial, sat down, and proceeded to address the congregation. Surprisingly, reading from the Torah is omitted. However, rather than conclude that this was an unusual practice, it is more reasonable to assume that Luke omitted the Torah reading and noted only that of the Prophets because this alone was congruent with his agenda (i.e., Jesus subsequent sermon).21 The actual selection of the prophetic reading described by Luke is enigmatic. Was it the prescribed reading for that particular Sabbath? Who made that decision? Lukes account seems to indicate that Jesus himself chose the passage. If so, was this Lukes invention, or was it indeed an accepted practice in the Galilee, and perhaps in most contemporary synagogues for that matter? Given the absence of parallels, however, no denitive answer is apparent. The sudden and dramatic change in the peoples attitude toward Jesus (vv. 22, 28) may
18. Luke 4:1630. 19. Finkel, Jesus Sermon at Nazareth, 115. 20. These themes can be summarized as follows: (1) Jesus message is rooted in Jewish tradition the synagogue setting, reading from Scriptures, and preaching; (2) his mission is of a decidedly social, humanitarian naturehelping the poor, releasing captives, curing the blind, and freeing the oppressed with a distinctly miracle-oriented component; (3) fulllment is to take place imminently, and Jesus himself is the messianic prophet; (4) having been rejected and persecuted by the Jews, Jesus mission will address the gentiles, as did those of Elijah and Elisha (see also Luke 17:724). See Combrink, Structure and Signicance of Luke 4:1630, 3942; Brawley, Luke-Acts and the Jews, 127; J. T. Sanders, From Isaiah 61 to Luke 4, 75106; Siker, First to the Gentiles, 7390. 21. In Acts 13:1516, the readings from both the Torah and the Prophets are noted.
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have resulted from the specic message delivered on this occasion, or it may reect the fellow-townsmens contrasting attitudes toward him, ranging from sympathetic acceptance to hostile rejection. Luke may well have chosen to condense these reactions into his account of Jesus programmatic sermon.22
Capernaum
Jesus activity in the Capernaum synagogue is mentioned in all the gospels.23 For Mark, followed by Matthew, this was, in essence, the beginning of his ministry. The synoptic gospels focus primarily on Jesus healing activity there while, according to John, Jesus delivered a long exposition regarding his divinity, the Eucharist, and Mystical Body clearly a speech setting forth the authors theological agenda. In contrast, nothing explicit is reported in the synoptic gospels about the content of his teaching in Capernaum, other than the fact that all who heard him were amazed. Jesus taught with authority and was, Mark adds, unlike the scribes. He reputedly exorcised demons and healed a withered hand there, and restored to full health a leper as well as a deaf and lame person.24 Whereas in Nazareth Jesus words caused an uproar, in Capernaum his deeds did so. A noteworthy aspect is the congregations reaction to Jesus act of healing on the Sabbath.25 The Pharisees (as well as the scribes, according to Luke, and the Herodians, according to Mark) found his behavior objectionable and sought ways to counter his inuence and activity.26 The historicity of any or all of these particular groups opposition is questionable but not impossible. Why such traditions developed specically with regard to Capernaum, rather than elsewhere, is unclear, unless we assume that this was Jesus base of operations throughout his Galilean ministry.27 Of further interest regarding Capernaum is the Lucan tradition that a Roman centurion stationed in the town built this synagogue.28 Although this claim is found only in Luke, Matthew, for his part, highlights the Roman ocers piety and faith; while Luke
22. Opinions vary regarding the reasons for this anger. See Brawley, Luke-Acts and the Jews, 1618 and bibliography cited there. See Bruce, Acts of the Apostles, 1518. 23. Mark 1:2129; Matt. 12:914; Luke 4:3138; John 6:3559. 24. Matt. 11:5; Luke 7:22; Mark 3:15. 25. Mark 3:16; Luke 6:611. See TDNT, VII, 2026. 26. On the identity of these groups and how they function in each gospel, see, inter alia, Schrer, History, II, 322.; Cook, Marks Treatment of Jewish Leaders; Saldarini, Pharisees, Scribes and Sadducees; Malbon, Jewish Leaders in the Gospel of Mark, 25981; D. R. Schwartz, Studies in the Jewish Background of Christianity, 89101. On the constantly recurring thesis that the Herodians were Essenes, see the judicious comments of W. Braun, Were the New Testament Herodians Essenes? 7588 and bibliography cited there. 27. See Iwe, Jesus in the Synagogue of Capernaum. 28. Luke 7:15. For possible archaeological remains of a rst-century synagogue building at Capernaum, see below.
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emphasizes the mans worthiness as a gentile, Matthew focuses on his personal faith.29 Lukes reference to the Roman centurion ts neatly into his overriding interest in portraying the gentiles openness and receptivity to Jesus message, even from the very outset of his ministry. Thus, the centurions faith and humility, along with his generosity and support of the synagogue, were suitable traditions for Luke to include. Did Luke himself invent this account of the centurions building of the Capernaum synagogue? Was it a product of an earlier tradition that he inherited, or is it, in fact, a valid piece of historical evidence? 30Once again, the issue of historicity remains moot.
Tiberias
In anticipation of a Roman invasion following the outbreak of the revolt in Jerusalem, Josephus was sent to organize the Galilee in 6667 c.e. Tiberias gures prominently in Josephus writings owing either to the citys pivotal role in the region, the lengthy process by which the Tiberians decided whether or not to join the revolt, Josephus particular need in the 90s to refute personal attacks by Justus of Tiberias regarding his conduct of the war, or all of the above.31 Whatever the reasons, Josephus movements in and around the city, his meetings, speeches, and escapes, as well as the names of local leaders, leave us with a much more detailed picture of Tiberias than of any other Galilean city of the time.32 Josephus mentions a Tiberian proseuche on three occasions. The rst time it is described as a very large building ( ) that could accommodate a large crowd ( )33 and where deliberations were held on that Sabbath morning. Nothing is said about worship, which presumably took place beforehand. The meeting itself consisted of a series of speeches, and the participants disbanded only at midday, when, Josephus notes, the Sabbath meal was served.34 Another meeting was set for the next day, and very early that morning, at the rst hour,35 people again gathered in the proseuche to resume discussions. A third meeting was called for the following day, which was also proclaimed a day of public fast.36 The proceedings began with the usual ( ) service
29. Matt. 8:513. On this narrative in its Matthean and Lucan contexts, see R. P. Martin, Pericope of the Healing of the Centurions Servant/Son, 1422. 30. Luke may have exaggerated the size of the centurions gift, given the fact that it came from an army ocer; in fact, the Roman may have made only a modest contribution. For the acceptance of the historical validity of Lukes statement, see White, Building Gods House, 86. 31. S. J. D. Cohen, Josephus in Galilee and Rome, 11470. 32. Ibid., 21621; see also Schrer, History, II, 17882; Avi-Yonah, Founding of Tiberias, 16069; Hoehner, Herod Antipas, 91100; U. Rappaport, Tiberias and Her Role in the Great Revolt, 1223; Freyne, Galilee, Jesus and the Gospels, 12934; R. A. Horsley, Galilee, 7880, 16974, 27175. 33. Life 277. 34. Ibid., 279. 35. Ibid., 280. 36. Ibid., 290303.
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for a fast day, but soon thereafter a confrontation ensued, which quickly became heated and violent. Josephus references to the Tiberian proseuche and the events there are noteworthy on several counts. First is the term itself. This is the only instance in which a Judaean synagogue is referred to as a proseuche (although an equivalent Hebrew term does appear in the Damascus Documentsee below). In Josephus other accounts, as well as in the gospel traditions, the Theodotos inscription, and rabbinic literature, the term used for this Judaean communal institution is invariably synagoge. Why, then, was Tiberias dierent? If, indeed, proseuche was used primarily with regard to the Diaspora, then it is possible that there was some tie between this Tiberias building and the Diaspora. In the absence of rm evidence, we can only speculate. Perhaps it was owing to the fact that, in many ways, the city was modeled after a Hellenistic polis by its founder, Herod Antipas. It had been named for an emperor; its local government was structured as a polis, replete with archons, boule and demos; the city boasted a stadium and, later on, had been given an additional name, Claudiopolis, possibly following Claudius death in 54.37 The proseuche building may well have been constructed by Antipas himself or, alternatively, during the reign of Agrippa I. The latters contact with the Diaspora, and particularly with Alexandrian Jewry, is well known, especially with regard to the events surrounding the anti-Jewish outbreaks of 38 c.e. Finally, it may not be coincidental that a later midrash describes a third- or fourth-century Tiberian synagogue as a dyplastoon () the identical term used elsewhere by the Tosefta for the rst-century Alexandrian synagogue ( 83.)It is of interest that this term appears in rabbinic literature only in conjunction with these two synagogues. A second noteworthy feature of this Tiberian account is the purportedly large size of the proseuche. Josephus mentions this specically, and his statement is reinforced by the fact that when not meeting in the proseuche, Tiberians would gather in the local stadium, much as the demos of Ephesus and Antioch were wont to meet in their respective theaters.39 To date, monumental synagogue buildings are known only from the Diaspora: one (perhaps two) in Alexandria, described by Philo and the Tosefta, and another in Sardis, dating from the late third to seventh centuries c.e. and excavated in the 1960s.40
37. See, for example, Josephus, War 2, 641 ( of 600); idem, Life 69, 296 ( ); 134, 271, 278, 294; idem, War 2, 599 (); 2, 615 (); idem, Antiquities 18, 149 (). See also Avi-Yonah, Tiberias in the Roman Period, 15462; A. Kasher, Founding of Tiberias, 311; D. R. Schwartz, Agrippa I, 13740. 38. Tiberian synagogue: Midrash on Psalms 93 (p. 416). Alexandrian synagogue: T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273); and below, Chap. 4. 39. Tiberias: Life 91; 331. See also Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 17778 (= Gutmann, Synagogue, 4748). Ephesus: Acts 19:29. Antioch: Josephus, War 7, 47. 40. See below, Chap. 4. On the Sardis synagogue, see Seager, Building History, 42535; Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 16890; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 48388; and below, Chap. 8.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
Finally, the Tiberias proseuche in this Josephan context served, inter alia, as a forum for discussing burning political issues of the day, thus indicating its pivotal communal role. In Josephus report, at least, its religious dimension was decidedly secondary, and on those occasions the Sabbath as well as fast-day rituals were apparently dwarfed by the pressures of the political agenda.
Gamla
date.41 The building may have been built around the turn of the rst century c.e., although a mid-rst century b.c.e. foundation, some time between Alexander Jannaeus (10376 b.c.e.) and Herod (374 b.c.e.), has also been suggested. The Gamla building is architecturally impressive (g. 4). It is the only public building thus far excavated in that town and may well be the only one that ever existed there. Located adjacent to the eastern wall, the building runs on a northeastsouthwest axis and is 21.5 meters long and 17.5 meters wide. The hall itself measures 19.7 by 15.3 meters. In the northwestern corner of this hall is a niche that may have been used for storage. Two entrances are located to the southwest, one giving access to the northern aisle and a sec41. Gutman, Gamala, 46062; Maoz, Architecture of Gamla, 15254; and Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 7374; Syon and Yavor, GamlaOld and New, 233. The buildings dimensions dier somewhat in each of the above publications; I will follow those of Syon and Yavor.
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ond, larger one, leading directly into the main hall. Another entrance from the southeast opens onto the eastern aisle. Below these elevated aisles were four rows of benches running along all four sides of the main hall, and in front of each row of benches was a paved aisle with a row of columns. The columns surrounded an open space in the middle of the hall that was unpaved, with the exception of a row of stones running almost its entire width. A single bench ran along the eastern wall of the building, and similar ones may have run along the northern and southern walls as well. A small basin (for washing hands?) in the eastern aisle was fed by a channel that cut through the eastern wall. No inscriptions were discovered in the building, and the only depiction is a stylized palm tree carved in a stone block. A stepped cistern just west of the synagogues main entrance may have been used as a miqveh. East of the synagogues main hall are several rooms, one of which may have had some sort of opening into the main hall. This room also contains benches, which led the excavator to suggest that it may have served as a study hall. If our assumptions are correct, namely, that the synagogue at this time was rst and foremost a communal institution and that the structure at Gamla is the only public building in the town, then, indeed, it must have served as the local synagogue. The buildings internal plan is reminiscent of (although not identical to) the Hellenistic public hall, e.g., the bouleuterion or ecclesiasterion, and is similar in its overall plan to the synagogues found at other Judaean sites. To date, Gamla is the only building that can be identied with certainty as a synagogue from the pre-70 Galilee-Golan region.
JERUSALEM
The existence of a number of synagogues in Jerusalem is clearly attested in several New Testament passages. Paul, for instance, makes the following statement upon being apprehended by the Roman authorities: They did not nd me in the Temple disputing with anyone, or stirring up a crowd, neither in the synagogues nor in the city. 42 However, there is no more unequivocal testimony for the existence of synagogues in Jerusalem than Acts 6:9, which notes a series of such institutions, all associated with Diaspora Jewry.43 After describing a conict within the nascent Jerusalem church, between Greek-speaking (possibly also implying Diaspora-born) and Aramaic-speaking Jews (6:17),44 Acts goes on to note the opposition to Stephen (6:89):
42. Acts 24:12; see also ibid., 22:19 and 26:11. See Cadbury, Book of Acts, 8689. 43. See TDNT, VII, 83738. 44. Although the Greek speaks of Hebraisti, the term probably refers to a Semitic language, and in this case Aramaic is a far more likely candidate. The evidence for Aramaics widespread use in rstcentury Judaea is overwhelming; see Fitzmyer, Languages of Palestine, 50131; Gundry, Language Milieu, 4048; Rabin, Hebrew and Aramaic, 100739; Schrer, History, II, 2026; and L. Levine, Judaism and Hellenism, 8084.
56
Discussion of this passage has at times focused on the exact number of synagogues referred to, since the text itself is somewhat ambiguous. Opinions range from one or two to ve. However, given what we know of the extensive Diaspora presence in the city and given the signicant dierences between these various communities (see below, Chap. 4), the last option appears to be the most likely.45 The existence of Jews in Jerusalem from each of the above-mentioned communities nds conrmation elsewhere. That Jews of Cyrene frequented Jerusalem is attested in Mark and Luke as well as Acts.46 The presence of Alexandrian Jews in the city is documented in a variety of sources, including one rabbinic tradition which specically mentions an Alexandrian synagogue there.47 Paul himself hailed from Cilicia, and his nephew also may have lived in Jerusalem.48 Acts mentions Jews from Asia who visited the Jerusalem Temple. Funerary inscriptions take note of Jews from Cilicia and elsewhere in Asia Minor, as well as from Alexandria and Cyrene, who were buried in the city.49 The term Freedmen or Libertines in this passage has attracted much attention. Many have identied this synagogue with the Theodotos inscription (see below) on the basis of passages from Tacitus and Philo, which indicate that the Jews who had been brought to Rome in captivity were soon freed.50 Theodotos family apparently hailed
45. One synagogue: Jeremias, Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus, 6266; Bruce, Acts of the Apostles, 156; Conzelmann, Acts of the Apostles, 47; Riesner, Synagogues in Jerusalem, 2045. Two synagoguesthe Freedmen synagogue, composed of Cyrenean and Alexandrian Jews, and a synagogue of Jews from Asia Minor: Denton, Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles, I, 18788; Foakes-Jackson and Lake, Beginnings of Christianity, 1, 4, 66; TDNT, VII, 837 n. 252; Bruce, Commentary, 133 n. 24; G. A. Smith, Expositors Bible, ad. loc. Five synagogues: Schrer, History, II, 428 and n. 8; S. Safrai, Pilgrimage, 57. On the Diaspora presence in Jerusalem, see Jeremias, Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus, 5871; L. Levine, Jerusalem, s.v. Diaspora; and generally, S. Safrai, Relations, 184204. Individual Diaspora Jews were quite prominent in Temple aairs. A number of high priests families originally hailed from there (particularly Egyptsee M. Stern, Reign of Herod, 274), and a number of Diaspora Jews contributed signicant gifts to the Temple: Alexander, father of Tiberius (AlexandriaJosephus, War 5, 205); Nicanor (AlexandriaM Yoma 3, 10; T Kippurim 2, 4 [p. 231]; Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, 24345); Helena and Monobaz (AdiabeneM Yoma 3, 10); see also T Kippurim 2, 5 [p. 231]. 46. Mark 15:21; Luke 23:26; Acts 2:10; 11:20. 47. T Megillah 2, 17 (p. 352) and parallels; see below. See, however, B Megillah 26a, which substitutes Tarsian for Alexandrian. 48. Acts 23:16. 49. Ibid., 21:27; Rahmani, Catalogue, 17. See also Kloner and Zissu, Necropolis of Jerusalem, 57. 50. Tacitus, Annals 2, 85; Philo, Embassy 155; Jeremias, Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus, 6566; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, I, 179; TDNT, IV, 26566; Riesner, Synagogues in Jerusalem, 2046.
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from Rome, as the Roman name Vettenos seems to imply; in all probability they were descendants of Jews taken captive by Pompey in 63 b.c.e. 51 Alternatively, some scholars, following several ancient manuscripts and older commentaries of Acts, read Libyans instead of Libertines, a name that would t the North African setting of the following two geographical names on the list.52 Finally, in line with rabbinic evidence, Jeremias has suggested that the entire list in Acts reects one community and should be identied with the Synagogue of the Alexandrians (or Synagogue of the Tarsians according to certain manuscripts).53 The signicance of the Acts passage is twofold. The list of Diaspora Jewish communities in Jerusalem is impressive. In contrast to Acts 2:511, which attests to a large and multifarious gathering from every nation in the Diaspora on the festival of Shavuot,54 our passage speaks of the institutionalized presence of Diaspora Jews in the city. Who initiated the establishment of these synagogues? Were they the initiative of those who settled in Jerusalem, or were they sponsored (in whole or in part) by the various Diaspora communities both to serve their former members and to attend to the needs of those compatriots visiting the city on pilgrimage? 55 We simply have no way of knowing. Undoubtedly, the single most important piece of evidence relating to the pre-70 Judaean synagogues generally, and Jerusalem synagogues in particular, is the Theodotos inscription, found by Weill in 191314 during the City of David excavations (g. 5).56 Discovered in a cistern along with other building fragments, the stone slab bearing this inscription in all probability came from a nearby structure, traces of which were claimed
51. The Roman connection has been suggested by Clermont-Ganneau (Dcouverte, 19697) on the basis of: (1) gens Vettia or Vectia being associated with that city, and (2) a person by the name of Vettienus mentioned by Cicero. This suggestion has been accepted by some (e.g., Schwabe, Greek Inscriptions, 36364), though there have been reservations as well; see S. Safrai, Pilgrimage, 5657 and n. 147; RothGerson, Greek Inscriptions, 78. Cf. Riesner, Synagogues in Jerusalem, 198. 52. Bruce, Acts of the Apostles; idem, Commentary, 133 n. 24. 53. Jeremias, Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus, 6566. 54. On the possible origins of this list in either astrological or geographical circles, see Brinkman, Literary Background, 41827. 55. On Acts possible theological agenda in this account, see J. T. Sanders, Jews in Luke-Acts, 245. 56. FitzGerald, Theodotus Inscription, 17581; Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, 10; as well as the thorough and comprehensive discussion by J. S. Kloppenborg Verbin, Dating Theodotos, 243 80. The inscription has usually been dated to the rst century c.e. (Schwabe, Greek Inscriptions, 362 65) and, of late, to the late rst century b.c.e. (Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 7686). However, Kee (Transformation of the Synagogue, 124; idem, Early Christianity in the Galilee, 47; idem, Dening, 726), following Vincent (Chronique, 24777), has opted for a post-70 date, a position that has been severely criticized. See a thorough review of the evidenceand a refutation of Kees theoryin Oster, Jr., Supposed Anachronism, 178208; see also E. P. Sanders, Jewish Law, 34143; Riesner, Synagogues in Jerusalem, 179210; van der Horst, Was the Synagogue a Place of Sabbath Worship? 1843; Kloppenborg Verbin, Dating Theodotos, 24380; and L. Levine, First-Century Synagogue.
58
5. Theodotos inscription.
to have been found. The inscription, written in Greek and dating from the rst century c.e., is ten lines long and reads as follows:
Theodotos, the son of Vettenos, priest and archisynagogos, son of an archisynagogos, grandson of an archisynagogos, built the synagogue [ ] for reading the Law [i.e., the Torah] and teaching the commandments, and the guest chamber, the rooms, the water installations as an inn for those in need from foreign lands [i.e., the Diaspora], which [i.e., the synagogue] his fathers founded together with the elders and Simonides.57
As noted, the name Vettenos appears to place this inscription among Jews who came from Rome. Of singular importance in this inscription is the listing of three synagogue activities: reading the Torah, teaching the commandments, and providing rooms and water for itinerant pilgrims. Whether the hostel services were intended only for Jews from Rome in the context of a Landsmannschaft or whether they were available to others as well is unknown.58 The number of buildings referred to in this inscription is dicult to assess. Are we speaking of a single, all-inclusive structure, resembling those from later periods at Dura
57. See comments in Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 7686; White, Social Origins, 29495. Hereditary positions such as those in the inscription are not uncommon in Jewish life in antiquity. The Hasmonean and Herodian dynasties, not to mention the high priestly oce (at least until the time of Herod), are cases in point, as is the family of Judah the Galilean, founder of the Fourth Philosophy (or Sicarii); see Urbach, Class Status and Leadership, 4345. From the rst century c.e. onward, the Hillelite (or perhaps Gamalielite) family of Patriarchs likewise constituted a hereditary oce, and this practice also seems to have been known among the sages in the talmudic era; see ibid., 6263; Alon, Jews, Judaism and the Classical World, 43657. This question has been addressed by Beer on several occasions; see his Sons of Moses, 14957; idem, Sons of Eli, 7993. An inscription from the Smyrna synagogue dating to the fourth century c.e. notes that one Irenopeus, a presbyter and pater of the community, was the son of Joub, likewise a presbyter in his time; see Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 8081; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, 2223. 58. See, for example, Schwabe, Greek Inscriptions, 363.
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and ammam Lif, for example? Or were there perhaps two separate buildings, one for worship and one for lodging? It is conceivable, though unlikely in light of the functions listed, that there were even more rooms involved (and perhaps an additional structure). The answer depends on how we understand the function of the water installations of this complex. Whom did they serve? If they were only meant to service the needs of the lodgers, then they may have been part of the hostel itself. If, perhaps, they were used for ritual and purication purposes of the general public, as those adjacent to the southern Temple entrance, then we may well be dealing with yet another structure. Also of interest in the above inscription is the nature of the institutions familial leadership, which is documented for over three generations. Those in charge were of priestly lineage, but it is very unlikely that this had anything to do with the synagogues proximity to the Temple. Rather, Vettenos was probably the head of a wealthy Roman Jewish family which had taken the initiative in building and maintaining this institution for several generations. The title of archisynagogue was clearly of importance in this particular institution and is known from other rst-century synagogues as well (see Chaps. 5 and 11). Finally, the concluding phrase of the Theodotos inscription has been taken to refer either to the building of this particular synagogue in Jerusalem several generations earlier by Theodotos ancestors, the elders, and Simonides, or to another, earlier, building of the original rst century b.c.e. congregation situated in either Jerusalem or Rome. Given the time frame involved, the Roman option is entirely conceivable. In that case, the Jerusalem synagogue referred to by the inscription would have been, in eect, the continuation of an earlier institution and was established for the purpose of serving visitors as well as the Roman Jewish community living in the city. Rabbinic sources have preserved a number of traditions of varying historical reliability with regard to the Second Temple synagogue, and specically those in Jerusalem. One of the earliest is a Toseftan tradition reported by R. Simeon b. Gamaliel of the second century concerning several disputes between the Houses of Shammai and Hillel (rst century c.e.) over synagogue practices permissible on the Sabbath: The House of Shammai says: Charity for the poor is not to be announced [or determined ]on the Sabbath in the synagogue, even [if it is a matter of collecting money in order] to arrange a marriage for orphans . . . and one does not pray for the sick on the Sabbath; and the House of Hillel permits [these things to take place]. 59 The House of Shammai seems to have made a clear and unequivocal distinction between what is proper and what is improper activity in the synagogue on the Sabbath; the Hillelites probably did not dier in principle but simply made allowance for extenuating circumstances, such as those noted.60 It seems safe to assume that the Houses of Shammai and Hillel were not conducting a
59. T Shabbat 16, 22 (p. 79); according to MS Erfurt, the tradent is R. Simeon b. Elazar, also of the second century. 60. Gilat, Development of the Shevut Prohibitions of Shabbat, 114.
60
theoretical discussion but rather were commenting on current practice in (some? all?) Judaean synagogues. Otherwise, it is dicult to understand why such an issue would arise.61 Healing the sick (and not merely reciting a prayer) on the Sabbath in some synagogues is clearly attested in New Testament pericopes (see above). Whether such a debate between these schools had any eect on the ordinary synagogue is unknown. Even within Pharisaic circles, the issue seems to have remained unresolved. Another Toseftan tradition reports that a rst-century synagogue of Alexandrian Jews located in Jerusalem was purchased by R. Elazar b. R. Zadoq for private purposes.62 This source appears in a relatively early rabbinic compilation dealing with laws and practices pertaining to the synagogue, many of which are clearly of older vintage. As already noted, the reality reected in this tradition, i.e., of Diaspora synagogues in rst-century Jerusalem, is corroborated in other sources as well. More problematic, however, are several rabbinic traditions that refer to a synagogue on the Temple Mount itself.63 The most explicit one in this regard is a reference in the Tosefta, which describes the Simat Bet Hashoeva ceremony on the holiday of Sukkot: R. Joshua b. anania said: We would not sleep all the days of Simat Bet Hashoeva. We would arise early for the morning Tamid sacrice and from there go to the synagogue and then to the additional sacrices. 64 In contrast to this tradition, which explicitly refers to a synagogue,65 the two parallel versions, in the Bavli (Sukkah 53a) and Yerushalmi (Sukkah 5, 2, 55b), do not. The former refers only to prayer, while the latter omits all reference to an interim stage between the morning and the additional sacrices. Although the Toseftan tradition is chronologically the earliest, and thus might have been assumed to preserve a more authentic account, these other conicting traditions tend to mitigateif not undermineits historical value.66
61. It is not clear whether the second issue discussed by the Houses in this source concerns a synagogue-related activity as well. 62. T Megillah 2, 17 (pp. 35253); Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d; B Megillah 26a. On the reading in the Babylonian Talmud, see above, note 47. 63. Hoenig, Supposititious Temple-Synagogue, 11531. See also Bacher, Synagogue, 620; G. F. Moore, Judaism, II, 12; E. Levy, Foundations of Prayer, 74. 64. T Sukkah 4, 5 (p. 273). On the Simat Bet Hashoeva festivities in the Second Temple, see Rubenstein, History of Sukkot, 13145. 65. Here, too, the manuscripts dier. MS London of the Tosefta reads academy (bet midrash) for synagogue, while the editio princeps and MS Erfurt add academy after synagogue; see Lieberman, TK, IV, 88889. In another Toseftan tradition (agigah 2, 9 [p. 383]) only the term academy appears in the Temple Mount ritual on Sabbaths and holidays. See parallels in T Sanhedrin 7, 1 [p. 425]; see also Y Sanhedrin 1, 4, 19c. 66. Chronological priority is, of course, no guarantee of historical accuracy. Early, even contemporary, sources can also be tendentious and incomplete. Nevertheless, being aware of what can happen to
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While the above tradition is inconclusive in and of itself regarding the presence of a synagogue on the Temple Mount, the fact remains that a synagogue is never mentioned in several important descriptions of the site. In Josephus two rather detailed descriptions of the Temple and Temple Mount,67 a synagogue is never noted. Nor does the Mishnah, with its very detailed listing of the dimensions of buildings, courtyards, and Templerelated appurtenances, ever make such a reference to a synagogue.68 Furthermore, the only time the Mishnah mentions a regular daily prayer service in the Temple, conducted by and for the administering priests, it never refers to a synagogue. Rather, these prayers appear to have been recited somewhere in the area of the Court of the Priests.69 Thus, taken together, the Mishnah and Josephus oer little basis for assuming the existence of a synagogue on the Temple Mount. Several rabbinic sources report on the number of synagogues in Jerusalem. One speaks of 480; another, probably a corruption of the rst, speaks of 460, and yet another notes 394.70 These numbersall appearing in later amoraic compilationsappear to be highly exaggerated, and in one case, clearly symbolic (viz., the number 480). Truth to tell, the unusual gure of 394 appearing in the Bavli is baing.71 What such traditions do evidence, however, is the assumption by later generations that late Second Temple Jerusalem abounded in such institutions. More than that, however, we cannot say.
traditions in the process of being transmitted from generation to generation (and at times to entirely different cultural and social contexts), when judging a sources historicity, we ought to give some weight to its proximity to events or institutions. 67. War 5, 184237; see also Busink, Der Tempel von Jerusalem, 1062.; Hildesheimer, Die Beschreibung der herodianischen Tempels, 132. 68. M Middot 14. See Busink, Der Tempel von Jerusalem, 152974; Hollis, Archaeology of Herods Temple, 103231. 69. M Tamid 5, 1. 70. 480 synagogues: Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d; PRK 15, 7 (p. 257); Song of Songs Rabbah 5, 12; Lamentations Rabbah 2, 4 (p. 50b) and Proem 12 (p. 6a); Yalqut Shimoni, Isaiah, 390 (481 synagogues). 460 synagogues: Y Ketubot 13, 1, 35c. 394 synagogues: B Ketubot 105a. See Miller, On the Number of Synagogues, 5155. 71. On the tendency in rabbinic literature to exaggerate data from the Second Temple period, see T Pesaim 4, 15 (p. 166); and Lieberman, TK, IV, 568. See also B Pesaim 64b; Lamentations Rabbah 1, 49 (p. 23a); Josephus, War 6, 42327.
62
6. Masada synagogue, looking north. The room containing scroll fragments is to the left.
fortress by the Sicarii (an extreme revolutionary faction) between 66 and 74 c.e. 72 Surrounded on all four sides by benches arranged in four tiers (with a single bench adjacent to the northern room), the rectangular hall measured 15 by 12 meters and had a single door 1.35 meters wide in the middle of its southeastern wall. Unique to Masada is a small room (5.7 by 3.5 meters) protruding into the northern corner of the hall. It is in this room that fragments of scrolls from the books of Deuteronomy and Ezekiel were discovered; these contained passages undoubtedly used in synagogue liturgy at the time.73 It would appear that the main hall (compared by Yadin to an ecclesiasterion, by Avigad to a Hellenistic basilica, by Foerster to a pronaos of a temple at Dura Europos, and by Maoz to a hypothetical Alexandrian assembly house) served the revolutionaries of Masada for meeting purposes generally as well as for religious servicesi.e., it functioned as a rstcentury synagogue.74
72. Yadin, Masada, 18191; idem, Synagogue at Masada, 1923; and now Netzer, Masada, 40213. Yadin once opined that the hall also functioned as a synagogue in Herods time as well, but this suggestion has found few proponents. Foerster describes the room in this earlier stage as a vestibule and hall similar to those at Herodium, while Netzer identies it as a stable (see Yadin, Synagogue at Masada, 2021; Foerster, Synagogues at Masada and Herodium, 2429; Netzer, Masada, 41013). 73. The scrolls were found in pots, although it is not clear if they were put there for temporary storage or as a genizah; see Netzer, Masada, 410. 74. Yadin, Synagogue at Masada, 20 n. 1; Avigad, On the Form of Ancient Synagogues, 9598; Foerster, Synagogues at Masada and Herodium, 2629; Maoz, Judaean Synagogues as a Reection, 195. Thus, the positioning of the small room in the direction of Jerusalem, opposite the synagogues entrance, would have been merely coincidental, as Netzer also seems to indicate (Masada, 41012); nevertheless, this does not signify any intention of an orientation toward the city.
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Herodium
The 15-by-10.5-meter hall at Herodium, which apparently functioned earlier as a triclinium in Herods fortress palace, was apparently used by the revolutionaries as a synagogue during the First Revolt against Rome.75 Four columns and several rows of benches were introduced into this rectangular hall. As at Masada, its plaster walls were simple and unornamented. Entrance was gained through three portals in the east, and just outside the hall was a stepped cistern that may have served as a miqveh, a juxtaposition similar to that at Gamla.
Qumran
The situation at Qumran is indeed intriguing. The Qumran scrolls and various literary descriptions of the Essenes (and I am assuming that the Essenes and Qumran sect were closely associated, if not identical) indicate that the concept of worship was well developed by this group. On numerous occasions, community rules and practices relating to the form and content of the sects worship were prescribed, as this realm had a central role in the sects life. Proof of this can be found in the remains of over two hundred nonbiblical prayers, psalms, and hymns recovered from among the Qumran manuscripts.76
75. Foerster, Synagogues at Masada and Herodium, 24. 76. See, for example, 1QS 6:38; Josephus, War 2, 12829; Fraade, Interpretive Authority, 5658; Weinfeld, Prayer and Liturgical Practice, 16075; idem, Morning Prayers in Qumran, 48194; Chazon, Prayers from Qumran, 26584; Falk, Qumran and the Synagogue Liturgy, 40434.
64
Priests were pivotal in these worship settings, and collections of blessings and prayers seem to have been in circulation there.77 Various opinions have been put forth regarding the required number of times for daily prayer (ranging from two to six).78 Talmon, on the one hand, has argued that these liturgical modes were a continuation of biblical models rather than variations of forms that later found expression in rabbinic literature, a conclusion likewise reached by Nitzan in her study of Qumran prayer.79 Weinfeld, Schiman, and Chazon, on the other hand, have argued for a close tie between Qumran and later Jewish practices, particularly those recorded in rabbinic literature.80 Nevertheless, despite the centrality of liturgical patterns as reected in the scrolls, nothing whatsoever is said about the public reading of Scriptures. Could there have been a conscious aversion to imitating what was being done in contemporary synagogues yet another expression of the Qumran sects desire to maintain biblical precedents while rejecting models that had evolved within the Jewish community in the post-biblical era? Alternatively, did the ongoing practice of study within the Qumran community render such public readings superuous? Interestingly, it appears that another breakaway group of the Second Temple period, the Samaritans, did not include the reading of Scriptures as part of its communal ritual at this stage either. They, too, may have tried to remain within biblical parameters as much as possible or, alternatively, distance themselves from current Jewish practice.81 What was the setting for communal worship in Qumran? The Damascus Document mentions a =( house or place of prostration):
And no one entering a house of prostration shall come in a state of uncleanness requiring washing. And at the sounding of the trumpets for assembly, he shall have done it [i.e., the
77. On priests at Qumran, see, for example, 1QS 2:1920; 6:45, 8; 9:7; and comments in Cross, Ancient Library of Qumran, 128.; Gartner, Temple and the Community in Qumran, 415; Licht, Rule Scroll, 11015; Leaney, Rule of Qumran, 9195, 165, 184; Gaster, Dead Sea Scriptures, 33235; Gruenwald, From Apocalypticism, 12544; Weinfeld, Organizational Pattern, 19; Schiman, Eschatological Community, 68 71; Fraade, Interpretive Authority, 4669, esp. 5657; Newsom, He Has Established For Himself Priests, 10120. For a suggested additional dimension of Qumrans priestly orientation focusing on basic ideological issues, see D. R. Schwartz, Law and Truth, 22940. On the blessings and prayers found at Qumran, see Nitzan, Qumran Prayer and Religious Poetry, passim; Baillet, Qumran Grotte 4, 7386; Schiman, Dead Sea Scrolls and the Early History of Jewish Liturgy, 3542; Goshen-Gottstein, Psalms Scroll (11QPs 2), 2233. 78. Schiman, Dead Sea Scrolls and the Early History of Jewish Liturgy, 3940; Talmon, World of Qumran, 215. 4Q503 contains liturgical blessings for each day of the month, twice daily, in the evening and morning; see Chazon, Qedushah Liturgy, 1014. 79. Talmon, World of Qumran, 1152. 80. Weinfeld, Prayer and Liturgical Practice, 24158 and bibliography cited there; Schiman, Dead Sea Scrolls and the Early History of Jewish Liturgy, 3345; Chazon, Prayers from Qumran, 26584; eadem, Qedushah Liturgy, 717; eadem, When Did They Pray? 4251. 81. Weinfeld, Prayer and Liturgical Practice, 24142.
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washing] before or he shall do it later, but they (the impure) shall not interrupt the whole service; for it is a holy house [28.]
The term house of prostration, reminiscent of the Diaspora proseuche, may also hark back to biblical precedents, where such a term, together with the designation , refers to worship in general and possibly even to prayer.83 The nature and structure of this worship setting is never made explicit, but it undoubtedly consisted of prayers, blessings, and hymns described in other Qumran writings. It is such a setting that Josephus may have had in mind when he described the main Essene worship service (and communal meal) near midday.84 Where at Qumran would such a place have existed? The most reasonable guess is room 77 (according to de Vauxs numbering), the largest at the site (g. 8). This room may have functioned not only as a dining area but also as a place of worship. A platform at the western end of the room probably had some signicance.85 If indeed public worship at Qumran included hymns, prayers, and blessings, as well as a sacred communal meal, then paradoxically the synagogue at Qumranfor all its uniqueness in setting, function, and liturgyconforms in certain ways with the ordinary Judaean synagogue. The liturgical dimension was neither set apart nor assigned a special place; rather, it found expression in the main assembly hall of the building, as did other communal activities. Let us turn now to the literary evidence regarding the Essenes. Philo oers us an interesting description of their Sabbath worship in contrast to the description in the Qumran scrolls. Essene worship, according to Philo, consisted of the reading and expounding of
82. CD 11, 2112, 1; interpretation follows Steudel, Houses of Prostration, 4968, and especially 5052; but see also Vermes, Dead Sea Scrolls, 110, and Schiman, Reclaiming, 291, for somewhat dierent renditions of this passage. Talmon (World of Qumran, 24142) and Nitzan (Qumran Prayer and Religious Poetry, 6263) concur that the reference is to a place of worship in Qumran; Falk, however, demurs, claiming that the reference is to the Jerusalem Temple (Daily, Sabbath, and Festival Prayers, 24345). In general, he argues for close liturgical ties between Qumran and the Temple (ibid., 25355). 83. II Sam. 12:20; Jer. 26:2. 84. War 2, 12931. 85. Talmon, World of Qumran, 62. The fact that the pantry with a full array of dishes and bowls was located adjacent to room 77 supports this identication. The only other option for locating this gathering at Qumran in room 4, which was lined with benches, or room 30 next to it. However, room 4 is very small, thus precluding its use by the entire sect on a daily basis. Room 30 is immediately under the scriptorium and was probably used in connection with the preparation of scrolls. Alternatively, the author of the Damascus Document may not have had Qumran in mind, but rather the various sectarian communities scattered throughout the country that may have set aside a special expressly for liturgical purposes; see Schiman, Dead Sea Scrolls and the Early History of Jewish Liturgy, 35. For a recent attempt to view the Qumran texts as reecting the practices of a synagogue community closely related to Hellenistic associations, see Klinghardt, Manual of Discipline, 25167.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
8. Room 77 at Qumran, looking west, possibly used for meals and liturgical gatherings.
Scriptures in synagogues. Regarding their Sabbath worship, he notes: For that day has been set apart to be kept holy and on it they abstain from all other work and proceed to sacred spots which they call synagogues [ ]. There, arranged in rows according to their ages, the younger below the elder, they sit decorously as bets the occasion with attentive ears. Then one takes the books and reads aloud and another of especial prociency comes forward and expounds what is not understood. 86 Whether this description is reective of Essene settings generally, perhaps even in Qumran (although inexplicably ignored in the scrolls) or, alternatively, everywhere in Judaea except Qumran, is impossible to determine. It is quite possible that Essene groups throughout Judaea adopted certain practices regnant in the general community, and it is these that Philo highlighted.
86. Philo, Every Good Man Is Free 81. 87. Antiquities 19, 27991. On Claudius edict and other decrees, see Tcherikover, Hellenistic Civilization, 40915. See also D. R. Schwartz, Agrippa I, 3031. Imperial protection extended to holy objects as well. See Josephus, War 2, 231, and idem, Antiquities 20, 11517, where we are told that a Roman soldier was executed by the procurator Cumanus for tearing a Torah scroll.
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One very concrete expression of this Imperial support was awarding Agrippa I rule over Judaea and Samaria, in addition to the regions already under his control.88 It is in reaction to these developments that some young men in Dor desecrated the local synagogue by erecting a statue of the emperor there. Agrippa appealed to Petronius, governor of Syria, who quickly intervened by dispatching a harsh letter to the leaders of the city ( ) in which he demanded the apprehension of the perpetrators of this deed. In the course of this letter quoted by Josephus, Petronius makes the following points regarding the synagogue:89 ( ) the inviolability of the synagogue is considered a time-honored Jewish privilege, i.e., laws of the fathers ( . . . ); ( ) setting up a statue in a synagogue is prohibited (lit., is a sacrilege); ( ) the synagogue is the realm of the God of Israel; no other deity or statue can be put there without destroying the institution (each [god] must be lord over his own place, in accordance with Caesars decree).90 By responding quickly and rmly, Petronius hoped to squelch any overt hostilities between local Jewish youth and their pagan counterparts.91 We never learn what transpired thereafter, since Josephus narrative then moves on to other events. There can be little doubt, however, given the stability of Imperial rule and Agrippas rm control over his kingdom, that order was quickly restored and the statue removed.92 It is not dicult to imagine that a synagogue should be the target of attack by resentful pagan youth in the wake of Caligulas abortive attempt to desecrate the Jerusalem Temple, although it may be entirely fortuitous that such an incident took place in Dor and not elsewhere. In contrast to the mobs in Alexandria a few years earlier (38 c.e.), the pagan youth made no attempt to destroy the synagogue building at Dor, much less Jewish homes and shops.93 The Dor incident appears to have been the work of a small group of young men () who may have been resentful of Jewish particularism and its recognized status, frustrated by the failure of Caligulas plan, and perhaps apprehensive about the restoration of Jewish political sovereignty in the guise of Agrippa.94
88. Antiquities 19, 29296. See Schrer, History, I, 44254. 89. Antiquities 19, 300311. 90. Ibid., 305. 91. Ibid., 30911. On the history of such tensions between Jews and pagans during the Hellenistic and early Roman periods in Palestine, see J. H. Levy, Studies in Jewish Hellenism, 6078. 92. D. R. Schwartz, Agrippa I, 135. 93. Philo, Flaccus 4496; idem, Embassy 13237; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 23542. Likewise, extreme measures, such as the scourging, torturing, and hanging evidenced in Alexandria, were not invoked in Dor. 94. Josephus himself refers to them as young men of Dor, who set a higher value on audacity than
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Caesarea
Some twenty-ve years later, ca. 6566, at the height of a conict over the status of the Jews in Caesarea, Josephus takes note of a synagogue in that city.95 It apparently adjoined land owned by a gentile; either the synagogue was located in a predominantly non-Jewish neighborhood, a non-Jew happened to own land in an area where many Jews lived, or there were no distinct neighborhood boundaries between Jews and non-Jews in rst-century Caesarea. Unfortunately, there is no way of determining which of the above options is correct, although the implications of each are intriguing. When the Jewish community attempted to buy the plot, the proprietor not only refused to sell but proceeded to build workshops on the site, leaving the Jews only a narrow, dicult, and perhaps noisy passageway to the building. Some Jewish youthreferred to by Josephus as hotheads ()decided to take matters into their own hands and tried to halt construction, but were prevented from doing so through the intervention of the procurator Florus.96 According to Josephus, when the Jews had congregated inside the synagogue on the following Sabbath, someone sacriced a bird on an overturned pot at the buildings entrance. The Jews were outraged; the mock sacrice was clearly to be perceived as a desecration of their building and may also have constituted an insidious reference to a wellknown pagan accusation that the Jews were expelled from Egypt because they were lepers.97 Although the Romans intervened and removed the oensive object, matters by then had gotten out of hand. Violence broke out and the Jews ed to nearby Narbatta.98
on holiness and were by nature recklessly bold (Antiquities 19, 300). By way of contrast, see the recently published honoric dedication from second-century Dor to a Roman governor, presumably of Syria, in Gera and Cotton, Dedication from Dor, 25866. 95. War 2, 26670, 28492; Antiquities 20, 17378, 18284. See also L. Levine, Jewish-Greek Conict, 38197. Opinions have varied regarding the nature of this conict and the Jews demands; see ibid.; A. Kasher, Isopoliteia Question in Caesarea, 1627; D. R. Schwartz, Felix and Isopoliteia, 26586. 96. War 2, 28588. To achieve the same end, Jewish leaders bribed the Roman ocial, whereupon Florus promptly ed the city, leaving the Jews to pursue their ends unobstructed. 97. Against Apion 1, 279 (in refutation of Manethos claim; see M. Stern, GLAJJ, I, 81). According to the Torah (Lev. 14:17), the purication rites for a leper included the sacrice of a bird on an earthen vessel. A similar calumny was also asserted by Pompeius Trogus and Lysimmachus; see M. Stern, GLAJJ, I, 33537, 38385, 533, and his comments on pp. 8485. On the accusations of leprosy made by Philo of Byblos, Ptolemy Chennus, and Helladius regarding Moses in particular, see ibid., I, 533; II, 14445, 149, 491. 98. According to the sixth-century historian Malalas, Vespasian destroyed a synagogue in Caesarea and built an odeum in its place (Chronicle 10, 261 [p. 138]), as he did in Antioch, replacing the synagogue there with a theater (see below, Chap. 4, note 232, as well as L. Levine, Roman Caesarea, 2526).
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9. Isometric reconstruction of the Qiryat Sefer synagogue. The entrance leads into a hall containing columns and an aisle. The structure is separated from the surrounding buildings.
Qiryat Sefer
In the course of building the modern town of Qiryat Sefer (near Modiin), an ancient village was discovered in the summer of 1995.99 Two clusters of buildings were found containing residential quarters, storerooms, and an olive press. Between these clusters and separated by an open space was a small square building measuring 9.6 meters on each side (g. 9). Unique to the site in terms of its size, location, plan, and the type of stone used, the building was oriented on a northwest-southeast axis, with its entrance facing northwest. The facade of the building was built of hewn stones with margins typical of the Herodian building style of the late Second Temple period. The oor of the hall was paved with large, well-tted agstones, and along three sides was a similarly paved elevation that presumably served as benches, with room for an aisle behind them, as at Gamla. Four columns with Doric capitals stood in the hall, and four pilasters against the northwestern and southeastern walls of the building continued the line of the columns. Potsherds and coins indicate that the site rst developed in the Hellenistic period, grew considerably in the rst century c.e., and continued into the second; it was abandoned some time during the rst half of the second century, quite likely as a result of the Bar-Kokhba revolt. Although a nal report has not yet been published, it seems quite certain that this building was a small synagogue that served the village and its immediate area. Given its central location in the settlement, its careful construction, and public character, as well as its overall similarity to the Gamla structure (albeit of considerably smaller proportions), this building seems to be a credible candidate for the rst village synagogue ever found in Judaea.
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100. Onn et al., Khirbet Umm el-Umdan, 64*68*, now superseded by Weksler-Bdolach et al., Identifying the Hasmonean Village of Modiin, 7276.
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of the published ndings, has concluded that the water channels on three sides of the hall were built at the same time as the earlier oor, i.e., that the original rst-century building was intended as a water facility that functioned as a nymphaeum in both stages. The oor of the second stage was raised to correct a problem of ooding.103 Chorazim. In 1926, Ory reported the discovery of a synagogue at Chorazim, some 200 meters west of the later building visible today at the site. Orys unpublished report states the following: A square colonnaded building of small dimensions, of a disposition similar to the interior arrangement of the synagogue, 7 columns, 3 on each side (the entrance was aorded through the east wall), were supporting the roof, and the whole space between the colonnade and walls on three sides was occupied with sitting benches in 5 courses. Unfortunately, these remains have never been veried. Visits to the site have yielded no clues as to the whereabouts of this structure. Orys report has been included on occasion in surveys of rst-century synagogues, but the use of such data seems unwarranted for the present.104 Northern Jerusalem. In 1991, while excavating an agricultural settlement in the northern part of the city, archaeologists found a large agricultural building complex. First reports spoke of a niche in the southern wall, benches along the walls, an adjacent courtyard also lined with benches, and nearby miqvaot. They suggested that this complex was, in fact, a synagogue or, at the very least, a prayer room. The complex was supposedly built in the rst century b.c.e. and abandoned following the earthquake of 31 b.c.e. 105 However, this identication has been greeted with general skepticism. The niche and benches were rather crudely made and did not seem to indicate any type of public building. Moreover, the claims made in a very brief report published several years later were severely reduced, and some details were enigmatically altered or eliminated.106 The case for a synagogue or prayer hall at this site appears to have evaporated. Jericho. In the winter of 199899, Netzer announced the discovery of a synagogue in Jericho dating from the rst half of the rst century b.c.e. (ca. 7570 b.c.e.).107 The build103. Netzer, Did the Water Installation in Magdala Serve as a Synagogue? 16572. Cf. also Maoz, Synagogue of Gamla and Typology of Second-Temple Synagogues, 39. 104. Foerster, Synagogues at Masada and Herodium, 26. 105. Josephus, Antiquities 15, 12122. 106. Onn and Rafyunu, JerusalemKhirbet a-Ras, 61: At the next stage [i.e., the rst century b.c.e.L.L.] the complex was renovated; along the southern wall of the northern tower, a new wing was built which spread over a large part of the courtyard. In the middle of this new wing, a miqve together with a courtyard in the shape of [the Hebrew letter] resh were discovered, and to the south a rectangular room (4m x 5m) divided by a low wall of hewn stones. In the eastern [sicL.L.] wall of this room was a square niche in front of which was a stone-slabbed oor. It is quite possible that at this stage, which ended with the destruction caused by the earthquake of 31 b.c.e., this complex served as an assembly place for worship purposes. See also the note on this excavation in Riesner, Synagogues in Jerusalem, 192. 107. Netzer, Synagogue from the Hasmonean Period, 20321; idem, Hasmonean and Herodian Palaces at Jericho, II, 15992.
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ing (28 by 20 meters in its nal stage) is located just east of the Hasmonean palace. The eastern part of the complex consisted of seven rooms and a small courtyard; to its west was a large hall (16.2 by 11.1 meters) lying on an eastwest axis and containing twelve pillars with benches between them, aisles along each side of the room between the pillars and walls, and a channel that conveyed water from an aqueduct in the north to a basin in the room, and then to a miqveh in the south. In the last stage of the building, a triclinium was added on the western side of the hall, and a niche in its northeastern corner was identied as a storage place for Torah scrolls and other books. The building, which has been compared with that of Gamla (thus establishing its identication as a synagogue), is said to have served the palace sta living in the buildings to the east. If authentic, this site would constitute the earliest synagogue ever found in Judaea. Unfortunately, however, this identication is not without its problems. When all is said and done, there is very little hard evidence on which to base such a conclusion. The addition of a triclinium in the last stage cannot be considered a decisive factor for such an identication, even though we know that some ancient synagogues featured triclinia. Roman villas often had such rooms, very similar, in fact, to the Jericho building, but there is no known synagogue parallel to the plan of the Jericho building. Neither is there any basis (or parallel) for the suggestion that the niche, tucked away in the northeastern corner of the hall, served as a storage area for Torah scrolls and perhaps other objects. The presence of a miqveh is interesting, but, again, of limited value as a basis for identication. As the nearby palace complexand the city of Jericho in generalserved as an important center for priests who were obliged to use such ritual baths regularly, the discovery of a miqveh is not uncommon and thus cannot be used as decisive evidence for the existence of a synagogue. The assertion that this building resembled the Gamla synagogue, a point that the excavator considers to be of prime importance, is likewise unconvincing; the few similarities (i.e., four rows of columns, benches, and a water channel) are far outweighed by the many signicant dierences, such as the overall plan of each, the number and nature of the adjacent rooms, the location and arrangement of the benches, and the absence of a triclinium in Gamla. Moreover, the location of this proposed synagogue is curious. Whom exactly did it serve? There was no community in the immediate area of the palace complex other than several possible villasnot yet fully excavatedlying further east, along the same ridge. The claim that such a synagogue might have served the palace sta is not particularly persuasive. We have noted that the plan of this building, including the triclinium, is similar to many Hellenistic-Roman villas;108 it is quite possible that this hall may have been part
108. See, for example, de Franciscis, Pompei, nos. 49, 73; Wallace-Hadrill, Houses and Society in Pompeii and Herculaneum, 4043, 81, 107; Zanker, Pompeii, 36 (House of the Faun), 170 (House of the Golden Cupids).
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of such a villa, serving as a garden or atrium surrounded by a portico with a triclinium at one end.109 Thus, the claim that this rst-century b.c.e. Jericho building is the earliest synagogue ever found in Judaea should, for the moment at least, be held in abeyance. Perhaps further investigation and excavations will furnish more conclusive evidence. orvat Etri. In an excavation carried out by Zissu and Ganor in 19992000, a village dating from the Persian to Late Roman periods was discovered south of Bet Shemesh and northeast of Bet Guvrin.110 The village ourished in the rst centuries c.e., although it suered serious destruction in each of the revolts (6674 and 132135). The most prominent structure was a public building located on the northeastern outskirts of the village. Measuring 13 by 7 meters, the building was entered from one of its long walls (and thus it was termed a broadhouse-type building by its excavators); inside were remains of three columns across the width of the hall that were meant to support the roof. In front of the entrance was a courtyard with a stepped pool o to one side, identied as a miqveh. The building itself is dated to the period between the two revolts and is included here since it appears to be similar to the nearby Judaean village synagogues discussed above. At rst glance, it would seem that this public building is as good a candidate as any to be considered a rst-century synagogue. The building is clearly of a dierent order than those surrounding it, and the entranceway is a further indication of its public nature. Our main reservations involve the meager nds within the building itself. In contrast to the two other Judaean village synagogues from this time, the building has no benches or stone-paved oor, nor is the deployment of its columns (three in a single row in the middle of the hall) evidenced elsewhere, where two to four columns surround an open space in the middle. In sum, this building may well be a village synagogue but, admittedly, there remains an element of doubt.
109. See Maoz, Synagogue that Never Existed, 12021; and the response of Netzer, Synagogue in Jericho, 6970. For other reservations as regards identifying this building as a synagogue, see Shanks, Is It or Isnt ItA Synagogue? 5355; Claussen, Versammlung, 18586; Schwarzer and Japp, Synagoge, Banketthaus oder Wohngebude? 27788. 110. Zissu and Ganor, orvat Etri, 1827. In support of this identication, see Maoz, Notes, 55.
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style betting a community-oriented framework. Gamla, Masada, Herodium, Qiryat Sefer, and Modiin each have a square or rectangular area with columns and benches, an arrangement facilitating communal participation for political, religious, or social purposes. The model chosen consciously or subconsciously for these settings approximated Hellenistic bouleuteria or ecclesiasteria, which likewise catered to an assembly of people empowered to make decisions. This communal dimension is likewise in evidence at Dor and Caesarea, where the synagogue became a target of anti-Jewish activity. As per one early rabbinic tradition, it was also a place where charity monies were collected. Furthermore, the events in Tiberias emphasize unequivocally the pivotal role that the local proseuche played as a setting for critical communal deliberations at the outbreak of the revolt. On this occasion, the synagogue lled several roles simultaneouslyas both a place of worship and a setting for political debates. The religious dimension was an important component on the synagogues agenda as well. However, it must be placed in perspective given the nature of our literary sources, which have a clear propensity to emphasize this aspect of the synagogues activities, often to the exclusion of others. The gospel accounts focus on Jesus preaching and teaching, and Lukes description of his Sabbath-morning appearance in a Nazareth synagogue is extremely valuable; the Sabbath assembly of Caesarean Jews in their synagogue provides the setting for a demonstrative anti-Jewish act; the Tiberian proseuche was the scene of Sabbath and fast-day worship within a period of three days; and even the Theodotos inscription mentions the religious-educational aspects of the synagogue before its socialcommunal ones. Given this proclivity on the part of the literary sources to highlight the religious aspects of the institution, archaeological remains from this period prove to be an important corrective. The buildings themselves are neutral communal structures with no notable religious componentsinscriptions, artistic representations, or a Torah shrine. Torah scrolls or the ark were introduced into the community hall only for the Torah-reading ceremony and were removed thereafter. The Tosefta, in one its many early sources, seems to reect this situation well.111 The rst-century synagogue did not have the decidedly religious prole that the institution was to acquire by Late Antiquity. However, one component of a religious nature, the presence of a nearby miqveh, seems to have been fairly common among Judaean synagogues. Such was the case at Gamla, Masada, Herodium, Qumran, Modiin, and Jerusalem (assuming that some of the water installations noted in the Theodotos inscription refer to this usage as well).112 While there
111. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360). 112. It should be pointed out that the closest miqveh to the Masada synagogue was some distance away, none has been found near the Qiryat Sefer building, and none is mentioned in conjunction with a rstcentury synagogue.
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is nothing in Jewish law (then or now) that would require the use of a miqveh for synagogue worship (and, in fact, it becomes much less common in or near synagogues of Late Antiquity), its proximity does reect the communal, inclusive, nature of the building. Purity concerns were of enormous importance in Judaean society of the late Second Temple period, commencing in the mid-second century b.c.e. with the rise of the Hasmoneans. Early rabbinic legal traditions, the Qumran scrolls, and the discovery of some ve hundred miqvaot in and around Jerusalem and throughout much of Judaea all attest to this emphasis on purity, which was a prerequisite for entering the Temple precincts or selling agricultural products, wine, and oil to the Temple authorities.113 It is no coincidence, then, that the Mishnah mentions only two instances of the red heifer sacrice (for purifying those with corpse impurity) over a thousand-year period before the second century b.c.e., but seven instances (according to another tradition: ve) during the last 250 years of the Second Temple period (M Parah 3, 5). Despite the relative paucity of material, enough has survived to enable us to appreciate the diversity that characterized the pre-70 Judaean synagogue. Many synagogues in Jerusalem were linked to Jews from various Diaspora communities, which undoubtedly maintained diverse customs and practices. The proseuche of Tiberias, physically and functionally, stands in striking contrast to what we know about other Judaean synagogues. The Caesarea synagogue, located in the midst of other buildings (even those belonging to non-Jews), is clearly quite dierent from that of Gamla or Qiryat Sefer, not to speak of those at Masada and Herodium. And, of course, the Qumran worship setting was sui generis with regard to its name (house of prostration) and location, as indeed were most other aspects of this community. With regard to Jerusalem, given the presence of the Temple, there can be little doubt that what were considered usual synagogue activities elsewhere often found expression within the precincts of the Temple Mount. Moreover, synagogues in the city might have assumed additional responsibilities absent elsewhere, as, for example, in cultivating ties and serving the needs of pilgrims. This diversity holds true architecturally as well. Of the three best-known buildings from pre-70 Judaea commonly identied as synagogues (Gamla, Masada, and Herodium), the dierences are no less salient than the similarities. Nevertheless, several attempts have been made to delineate a typology for the Second Temple synagogue on the basis of these buildings: columns in the center, benches on all four sides with a focus in the center of the room, and the proximity of ritual baths.114 Such attempts at dening a typology, however, are unconvincing. Whatever elements
113. E. P. Sanders, Judaism, 21430; L. Levine, Jerusalem, s.v. ritual baths. 114. Foerster, Synagogues at Masada and Herodium, 2629; Maoz, Synagogue of Gamla and Typology of Second-Temple Synagogues, 3541; idem, Judaean Synagogues as a Reection, 1012; Netzer, Synagogues from the Second Temple Period, 27785; Strange, Archaeology and Ancient Synagogues, 3746.
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were held in common can be attributed to Greco-Roman architectural traditions and were adopted by synagogue builders because of their utility. Moreover, the dierences among these buildings are quite signicant, e.g., the location of entrances, internal plans, positioning and number of benches, shape of the hall, and overall setting vis--vis surrounding structures.115 Even the synagogues created by the revolutionaries at Masada and Herodium following the outbreak of hostilities in 66 dier from one another, although this is primarily due to the plans and functions of the earlier buildings that they replaced. Thus, it is unwarranted to speak of a single model of the Second Temple Judaean synagogue. Essentially, what we have is a variety of communal buildings that shared certain basic characteristics and served the myriad purposes of the rst-century institution. The diversity among synagogue buildings of Late Antiquity had a precedent in the rst century. A striking dierence between the status and role of Judaean synagogues may have been dueat least in partto regional diversity, and this is particularly evident when comparing the coastal area with the rest of the country. The synagogues at both Dor and Caesarea had extremely high proles: they were central institutions and were recognized as such by Jews and non-Jews alike. Such visibility had its disadvantages, for it made these buildings vulnerable to attack by hostile mobs. The events at Dor and Caesarea, as indeed at Alexandria at roughly the same time, point to a phenomenon that was to recur in times of political stress or in charged religious circumstances. Synagogues were desecrated and destroyed, and in Late Antiquity they could be outlawed and at times even converted into churches by local rebrands and agitated mobs.116 Thus, the coastal synagogues of Dor and Caesarea, located in pagan urban centers, had to deal with issues familiar to Diaspora Jewry but relatively unknown in areas where Jews formed the majority. In contradistinction to the Jews living in the interior of Judaea, those living in the coastal area as well as in the Diaspora ascribed to their synagogues a degree of sanctity, perhaps inuenced by the ubiquitous pagan temple. Petronius letter regarding the Dor synagogue certainly takes note of this characteristic, and apparently even those who perpetrated the desecration by placing the emperors statue there likewise assumed that there was some sort of sanctity inherent in this Jewish building. While the religious dimension of Judaean synagogues was not the decisive factor in dening the institution at the time, this may not have been as true of the hellenized, largely nonJewish coastal region. Living as they did among a dominantly pagan population, the Jews in these areas perhaps sought to enhance the status of their communal institution with a religious dimension, much as was being done by their Diaspora coreligionists (see below,
115. L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 1013; Chiat, First-Century Synagogue Architecture, 4960; idem, Synagogue and Church Architecture, 4956. 116. Parkes, Conict of the Church and the Synagogue, s.v. synagogues; Simon, Verus Israel, 22433. See also below, Chap. 7.
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Chap. 4). In the political realm, the Jews of Caesarea at least seem to have faced issues typical of a rst-century Diaspora setting.117 One rather well-documented activity of the synagogue was its setting for healing and miracles that purportedly occurred in rst-century Galilean synagogues. Other sources ignore this aspect of synagogue life, possibly because it was too common a phenomenon to require comment, too embarrassing, or simply one of the many items not addressed in these sources. Whatever the case, and despite its unusualness, there is no reason to question the reports validity. In fact, in diatribes delivered some three centuries later, the Antiochan John Chrysostom made the same points while attempting to dissuade Christians from attending synagogue services and following other Jewish practices (see below, Chap. 8). Nevertheless, it is dicult to assess the extent of such healings and miracle workings from the rst century. It seems doubtful that this activity was conned to the Galilee, to rural synagogues, or to the lower strata of society, but owing to the limited evidence at our disposal not much more can be said in this regard. A topic that has received a good deal of attention in recent publications is the relationship between the Jerusalem Temple and the rst-century synagogue. Some strikingly contrasting positions have been taken in this regard.118 On the one hand, a number of scholars have posited that the Temple inuenced the synagogue. Kasher has made this claim with respect to the Egyptian proseuche, and Strange regarding the Galilean synagogues.119 The most comprehensive presentation of this line of argument has been oered by Binder, who claims that the synagogue was, in fact, an extension of the Temple, asserting that the latters functions, ocials, liturgy, architecture, sanctity, and art shaped those of the former.120 Binder thus attempts to show that (1) synagogues of the rst century were considered sacred institutions; and (2) these synagogues were indeed patterned after the Temple. However, the evidence in this regard is, at best, partial. Synagogue sanctity seems to be indicated for only a small number of Diaspora sites and is never clearly attested for any Judaean ones, with the exceptions, perhaps, of Dor and the Tiberian proseuche. Moreover, Binders eorts to interpret a number of passages from Josephus that mention hiera (e.g., War 4, 4069) as referring to Judaean synagogues, and therefore as evidence for the existence of synagogue sanctity, are unconvincing. It is Binders second claim, namely, that synagogues everywhere were patterned after the Temple, that is far more revolutionary.121 Regrettably, he nds it dicult to substanti117. L. Levine, Jewish-Greek Conict, 38197. 118. For a fuller discussion of this issue and the various approaches, see my First-Century Synagogue. 119. A. Kasher, Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 20520; Strange, Art and Archaeology, 7576; idem, Ancient Texts, Archaeology as Text, 2745. 120. Binder, Into the Temple Courts. 121. Ibid., 12326, 481.
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ate this claim, as solid corroborative evidence is almost nonexistent. When all is said and done, the Temple and the synagogue were very dierent in essence, function, and organization: One embodied the quintessence of holiness in Judaism, the other was called several centuries later only a diminished sanctuary (see above, Chap. 2); one focused on sacrice, the other on Torah reading and prayer; one demanded silence in the cultic ritual, the other public recitations; one required a priestly leadership, the other did not (in other words, a sacral hierarchical framework par excellence in contradistinction to a communal one). In light of the paucity of material, it is dicult to marshal enough evidence to substantiate the theory that synagogues were extensions of the Temple. Binders approach is countered by Flesher, who suggests that the synagogue and Temple were diametrically opposed religious institutions.122 Having accepted the theory of an Egyptian origin for the synagogue, and that the synagogue was later imported into Judaea, Flesher notes that synagogues in Judaea are attested only in literary and archaeological sources for the Galilee, but not for Jerusalem or Judaea. The reason for this, he claims, is that the synagogue was not able to strike roots in the latter because of the Temples overwhelming presence and prominence in this region, as well as the fact that the Judaisms of these religious institutions were strikingly dierent. Indeed, the only Jerusalem synagogues that we know of by name were those founded by, or catering to, Diaspora communities that brought these institutions with them from abroad.123 The phenomenon of only Diaspora-related synagogues being noted in our sources regarding Jerusalem is indeed worthy of consideration. Whether this should lead to Fleshers particular conclusion, or whether the paucity of sources should caution us against drawing far-reaching conclusions in this regard, involves a basic methodological issue over which opinions continue to be divided. The assumption that the Temple and synagogue represented two dierent Judaisms, per Flesher, is certainly questionable. The line between two Judaisms on the one hand, and two frameworks with dierent but complementary functions within one all-encompassing Judaism on the other, is a ne one that should be rigorously argued and not merely asserted. If the Judaism of the synagogue and Temple were indeed so dierent, it is surprising that no ancient source bothered to note this clash. Philo, Jesus, Paul, and Josephus do not seem to have been aware of two such Judaisms, and it would seem that no such dichotomy existed in antiquity. In summary, we nd in late Second Temple Judaean society two contrasting developments. On the one hand, the Temple was assuming an ever more central role in Jewish life, not only because of the growth of Jerusalem as an urban center and as a focus of signicant pilgrimage, but also because of the accruement of power by the priesthood and
122. Flesher, Palestinian Synagogues, 2829. 123. In this regard, Flesher is forced to dismiss the evidence of several New Testament references that speak of synagogues in Jerusalem generally; see, for example, Luke 4:44; Acts 22:24, 26.
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the enhanced role of the Temple Mount (at least since Herods time) as the setting for a wide range of social, economic, religious, and political activities.124 On the other hand, the synagogue had been evolving as a distinct and dened institution, having fully assumed its role at the center of communal activity in Second Temple Judaea. Centralization in terms of the Temple was paralleled by a decentralization in the local synagogues. Prior to 70, the Temple was recognized as the central institution in Jewish life; nevertheless, the emerging synagogue had become the pivotal institution in local Jewish aairs. This parallel development in the rst century was indeed fortuitous. Though no one could have foreseen the outcome, the seeds of Jewish communal and religious continuity had already been sown well before the destruction of the Temple.
124. L. Levine, Jerusalem, 22653.
four
iaspora communities, particularly those of Alexandria and Egypt, have provided us with a signicant amount of material regarding the Hellenistic and early Roman synagogue, or proseuche. Epigraphical evidence hails from as early as the third century b.c.e., papyrological and archaeological data from the second century b.c.e., and literary sources from the rst century c.e. Together these sources aord an intriguing, if only partial, picture of this institution throughout the Hellenistic-Roman Diaspora. Regarding external appearance and internal organization, there were signicant dierences between the synagogues in Alexandria, Cyrene, Ostia, Delos, and Asia Minor. Even the various names by which communities referred to the synagogue may well reect dierent perceptions of the institution and its place in society. Nevertheless, the Diaspora synagogue fullled much the same function as a communal and religious center within each Jewish community, and Roman authorities clearly articulated the rights and privileges of this institution and the community in general in a number of contemporary decrees and edicts. By the rst century c.e., Jewish communities were to be found the length and breadth of the Roman Empire, with the possible exception of the northern and western provinces.1 Despite the well-known problems with regard to demographic estimates for an-
1. The widespread Jewish dispersion is attested, for example, by Diodorus Siculus (Bibliotheca Historica 40, 3, 8) for the Hellenistic period and, for the Roman era, by Strabo as quoted by Josephus in Antiqui-
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tiquity, it appears quite certain that the Jewish population of the Diaspora, estimates of which ranged between two and ve million, outnumbered that of Judaea well before 70 c.e. 2 It is reasonable to assume that almost any Jewish community would have had its own place (topos per Josephus),3 i.e., a synagogue. Thus, the number of such institutions throughout the Empire undoubtedly reached into the many hundreds, if not thousands. However, the information available regarding the pre-70 Diaspora synagogue relates only to a very small percentage of these places and, what is more, varies greatly in what is presented, and how. Evidence for the geographical distribution of this institution is likewise imbalanced. Egyptian Jewry is relatively well documented; information about an important region such as Syria is practically nil; Asia Minor merits considerable attention in several sources, particularly Josephus and Acts, but only limited information is available regarding Greece, Italy, North Africa, and the Bosphorus region. Nevertheless, when taken together, what we have is far from negligible, and it is to an examination of this material that we now turn. Given the extensive geographical dispersion, the variety of sources, and the fact that the sources tend to focus on particular communities, each locale will be discussed individually.
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Two inscriptions date from the reign of Ptolemy III Euergetes (246221 b.c.e.) and his wife Berenice, three from the reign of Ptolemy VIII (145116 b.c.e.) and his two wives named Cleopatra, three from the second or rst century b.c.e., and one from the rst century c.e. 7 Two other inscriptions are more dicult to date and stem from the late Hellenistic or early Roman eras.8 An inscription from Leontopolis may refer to a proseuche, and fragmentary remains of four inscriptions make mention of a temenos and probably also refer to a synagogue.9 Finally, four papyri dating from the late third century b.c.e. to the beginning of the second century c.e. note local synagogues in a variety of contexts.10 Altogether, this evidence sheds light on important aspects of the early Egyptian synagogue. The dedicatory inscription is the most common type, appearing (with minor dierences) some eight times throughout the Ptolemaic era. To cite two examples:
On behalf of king Ptolemy and queen Berenice his sister and wife and their children, the Jews [dedicated] the proseuche.11 On behalf of king Ptolemy and queen Cleopatra the sister and queen Cleopatra the wife, Benefactors, the Jews in Nitriai [dedicated] the proseuche and its appurtenances.12
Such inscriptions clearly reect the common Egyptian Jewish practice of dedicating synagogues to the ruling family. The geographical and chronological distribution of these inscriptions indicates that this practice was accepted by many segments of Egyptian Jewry. The implications of such a practice are fairly obvious: it expresses the loyalty and gratitude of the Jewish community toward the king and queen, as well as reects the Jews dependence upon them. The status of the Jews in Ptolemaic Egypt as part of the class of Hellenes (i.e., resident aliens and not native Egyptians) was due to their protection by and service to the king.13 In a strikingly similar fashion, Onias IV, who ed Judaea and sought asylum in Egypt, petitioned Ptolemy VI to build a temple to the God of Israel at Leontopolis in the likeness of that at Jerusalem and with the same dimensions on behalf of you and your wife and children. 14
and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions. Previously, most of these inscriptions had appeared in Freys CIJ and were later re-edited by Lewis in vol. III of CPJ. The last-mentioned work remains basic for papyrological material. 7. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 22, 117 (Ptolemy III); nos. 24, 25, 125 (Ptolemy VIII); nos. 13, 27, 28 (second to rst centuries b.c.e.); no. 126 (rst century c.e.). 8. Ibid., nos. 9, 20. 9. Proseuche: ibid., no. 105. Temenos: ibid., nos. 16, 17, 127, 129. 10. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, nos. 129, 134, 138; II, no. 432. 11. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 22. 12. Ibid., no. 25. 13. See Bickerman, Jews in the Greek Age, 8385; Modrzejewski, Jews of Egypt, 7387. 14. Josephus, Antiquities 13, 67. On this episode, see Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, 4446; Grabbe, Judaism, I, 26667; Modrzejewski, Jews of Egypt, 12133; Gruen, Origins, 4770.
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Egyptian Jewry was dependent upon royal recognition and support for its communal institutions, its right to own and administer property and assets, as well as the legitimacy and authority of its communal activities and decisions. Such royal backing is reected in a number of inscriptions: the ruling couple is referred to as benefactors, they declare a synagogue inviolate (), and order an earlier dedicatory inscription to be restored.15 In terms of synagogue practice generally, the Egyptian Jewish custom of dedicating such a building to the ruler is most unusual, and only two other parallels are known: a dedicatory inscription from Qatzion in the Upper Galilee from 197 c.e. (although the identity of that building is far from clear) and a fragmentary inscription from late secondcentury c.e. Osijek, Hungary.16 Several instances from Italy approximate Egyptian practice in that a number of synagogues in Rome were named after prominent Romans, including Augustus.17 An Ostia inscription notes the well-being of Augustus, 18 and a late midrash speaks of a synagogue in Rome named after Severus.19 However, even these similarthough not identicalinstances are relatively few in number, and thus the concentration of dedicatory inscriptions in Egypt is indeed unique. This was undoubtedly due to the centralized control exercised by the Ptolemies; as a result, religious (and other) buildings often required the sanction and authorization of the ruler.20 Evidence of this pattern in pagan Egypt is not lacking, and the practice carried over to the Jewish community.21 It is important to note that despite the clear and unequivocal imitation of this Ptolemaic dedicatory norm, the Jews, nevertheless, adapted it so as not to compromise their
15. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 25 and 125, respectively. See also A. Kasher, Three Jewish Communities, 11516. 16. The inscription from Qatzion is quite explicit as to the dedicatees (Septimius Severus and his sons, Caracalla and Geta), the date (197 c.e.), and the donors (the Jews). However, it continues to be debated whether the building (as yet not fully excavated) in which it was found was a synagogue or some other building. Advocates of a synagogue identication are Schrer (History, III, 93), S. Klein (Galilee, 127), Avi-Yonah (In the Days of Rome and Byzantium, 49), and Roth-Gerson (Greek Inscriptions, 12529), while those who question this identication include Kohl and Watzinger (Antike Synagogen, 209) as well as Lifshitz, who excludes this inscription from his collection of Greek dedicatory inscriptions (Donateurs et fondateurs). Regarding the inscription from Hungary, see Scheiber, Jewish Inscriptions, 5355; and below, Chap. 8. 17. From the catacomb inscriptions, we learn of a synagogue of the Augustesians, Agrippesians, and perhaps also Volumnesians; see Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 14042, 15759; and below, note 134. 18. Dating from the rst or second century, the fragmentary inscription reads: pro salute aug[usti] (For the well-being of the emperor); see Noy, JIWE, I, no. 13, as well as Fortis, Jews and Synagogues, 118; White, Social Origins, 39294. 19. Genesis Rabbati 45, 8 (p. 209). 20. Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, I, 190; A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 13438. 21. Pagans: Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, I, 19091, 226., 28284. See also Tcherikover, Hellenistic Civilization, 349; Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 174 n. 97; idem, Proseuche und Synagoge, 159. Jews: Dion, Synagogues et temples, 4575.
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own religious sensibilities. In contrast to the pagans, for example, the avoidance of divine epithets (especially ) was an elegant way of not acknowledging royal divinity.22 Philo makes a point of noting Jewish sensitivities in this regard.23 According to Josephus, Onias IV was also careful in his expression of obeisance to the Egyptian king when negotiating the building of the Leontopolis temple, as were the Jewish and Samaritan protagonists whose case was brought before Ptolemy Philometor.24 The overwhelming majority of references in Egypt are to a proseuche, appearing ten times in the inscriptions and four times in the papyri.25 The word synagoge is used once, and a reference to ocers of this institution twice; the designation eucheion (a place of prayer) appears only on one occasion.26 The Jews of Ptolemaic Egypt also borrowed terminology associated with pagan contexts in other instances as well. The phrase used to describe the God of Israel ( theos hypsistos, the Most High God) is documented in pagan as well as Jewish contexts, as are various terms for synagogue ocers, such as the archisynagogue and nakoros.27 The religious dimension of these proseuchai is reected in the sanctity accorded to at least some of them. A number of inscriptions specically refer to the holy or great place;28 other sources associate the institution with the Most High God. 29 The sanctity of one proseuche was expressed as follows: On the orders of the queen and king, in place
22. Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 16162; Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, I, 283. 23. Philo, Embassy 13449. 24. Onias IV: Antiquities 13, 67. Jews and Samaritans: ibid., 13, 7476. 25. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 9, 13, 22, 24, 25, 27, 28, 117, 125, 126. For references in the papyri, see above, note 10. On the term proseuche with reference to the Jewish community, see Levinskaya, Books of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 20725. 26. Synagogue: Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 20. Papyrus no. 138 (Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I) seems to refer to a meeting of a Jewish (burial?) association in the proseuche. Synagogue ocials: Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 18, 26. Eucheion: Tcherikover et al., CPJ, II, no. 432. 27. Theos hypsistos: C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 5572; Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, I, 282; II, 440 nn. 76465; TDNT, VIII, 61419; Simon, Theos Hypsistos, 37285; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 51103; Mitchell, Cult of Theos Hypsistos, 81148, and esp. 11021. This phrase was already widely used in the Septuagint (e.g., Gen. 18:20; Ps. 7:8; 17:14), Egyptian Jewish inscriptions (Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, 27475; and above), and contemporary Jewish Hellenistic literature (II Macc. 3, 31; III Macc. 7, 9). It appears also in the Delos synagogue (Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 72729; Schrer, History, III, 7071; and below), and the Bosphorus Kingdom (ibid., 72; Frey, CIJ, I, 690, 690a; Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 67; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 22946; Goodenough, Bosphorus Inscriptions, 22145; and below). See also Kraabel, Hypsistos and the Synagogue at Sardis, 8193. Archisynagogos: Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 18, and comments on p. 29. See also Rajak and Noy, Archisynagogoi, 7593. Nakoros (attendant): Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 129; see also the material gathered in Dion, Synagogues et temples, 6573; G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 4952. 28. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 16, 17, 127. Although the term proseuche does not appear in these fragmentary inscriptions, there can be little doubt that such a building was intended. 29. Ibid., nos. 19, 27, 105.
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of the previous plaque about the dedication of the proseuche, let what is written below be written up: King Ptolemy Euergetes [proclaimed] the proseuche inviolate []. The queen and king gave the order. 30 The original inscription, usually dated to the latter part of the second century b.c.e., thus attests to the holy status enjoyed by an Egyptian proseuche in the Ptolemaic period.31 Such a status may well be paralleled in a papyrus from Alexandrou-Nesos in the Fayyum dated to 218 b.c.e., where it is stated that a Jew named Dorotheus was accused of stealing a cloak and took refuge in a proseuche (for purposes of asylum?). Only after the intervention of a third party did Dorotheus agree to leave the cloak with the nakoros of the synagogue until nal adjudication.32 Another indication of the synagogues sanctity, albeit indirect, is reected in the use of terms such as and for sacred precinct in connection with a proseuche.33 Furthermore, a second-century papyrus describes a plot of land attached to a proseuche in Arsinoe-Crocodilopolis as a sacred grove or garden ( ).34 The above clearly imply that in many places, at the very least, the synagogue was considered a sacred institution. Philo, too, alludes to the sacredness and inviolability of proseuchai on a number of occasions (see below).35 Epigraphical evidence makes it quite clear that the proseuche might include other buildings or structures in addition to the sacred precinct (i.e., land or courtyards) noted above. Several inscriptions mention , which seems to refer to ancillary buildings, annexes to the main building, or landholdings.36 Other structures may have in30. Ibid., no. 125; Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 125; Dion, Synagogues et temples, 5759; Modrzejewski, Jews of Egypt, 9798; Rigsby, Asylia, 57173. 31. Dion prefers to date this inscription to the days of Ptolemy VIII Euergetes (145116 b.c.e.) and notes the interesting but not particularly compelling parallel act of granting the right of asylum to the Jerusalem Temple by Demetrius in 152 (I Macc. 10:43). See also Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, 214. 32. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 129. See also A. Kasher, Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 215. On the oce in general, see Llewelyn and Kearsley, New Documents, VI, 2036. 33. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 9, 129; Frey, CIJ, II, 1433; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 87; Dion, Synagogues et temples, 5960. 34. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 134. See also A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 138 39. Cf., however, an alternative suggestion of Modrzejewski ( Jews of Egypt, 89), who views this term as a well-known technical term for one category of landed property. 35. Another indication of the holiness of a proseuche is reected in III Macc. 7:1920: And when they nished their voyage in peace with appropriate thanksgivings, there, too, in like manner they determined to celebrate these days also as festive for the duration of their community. They inscribed them as holy on a pillar and dedicated a house of prayer [ ] at the site of the banquet. That a proseuche was built as a memorial to the miraculous salvation of a community is noteworthy. Unfortunately, the historicity of much of this books narrative is questionable. See, for example, Nickelsburg, Stories, 8084; Modrzejewski, Jews of Egypt, 14153. 36. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 9, 25. On the various meanings of , see ibid., 14; A. Kasher, Three Jewish Communities, 121. On the appearance of this term in a fragmentary inscription from Cyrene, see Fraser, Inscriptions of Cyrene, 11516.
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cluded a gateway (), such as the one from second-century Xenephyris, which is noted as having been part of a proseuche, or an exedra, such as the one from second- or rst-century b.c.e. Athribis.37 One papyrus mentions what appears to be a rather high water bill owed by two local synagogues; we can only conjecture that this may have been due to the use of water for guests, communal needs (e.g., sacred meals), or ritual purposes. However, it is also conceivable that some water may have been used for domestic purposes by Jews whose homes were located near the proseuche.38 A number of other interesting details regarding Egyptian proseuchai emerge from these data. Dedicatory inscriptions are about evenly divided between the community as a whole and wealthy individuals. Proseuchai were built by the Jewish communities of ArsinoeCrocodilopolis, Schedia, Nitriai, Xenephyris, and Athribis; all of these originated in the Hellenistic period and were dedicated to the royal couple.39 Among the seven inscriptions mentioning individual donations, two speak of donating the entire building, the others of donating parts thereof: an exedra, a sundial, and a well.40 The remaining inscriptions are fragmentary and make no mention of the objects involved.41 Of these seven inscriptions, two were in honor of the royal couple.42 In only two cases is the donors name mentioned, while in two others the donors wife and children are also included.43 Although the dating of these dedicatory inscriptions is uncertain, they appear to range from the second century b.c.e. to the late Roman period (i.e., the secondthird centuries c.e.). The proseuches centrality to the Jewish community is reected not only in the number of dedicatory inscriptions, buildings, and property associated with it but also by the fact that it was the meeting-place for various Jewish associations (). So, for example, we read of one such group (a burial society?) meeting in a proseuche.44 Less clear
37. Xenephyris: Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 24. Athribis: ibid., no. 28. This was apparently an annex (partially open?) to the main hall or building, itself used for a variety of purposes. On the exedra, see ibid., 49; A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 117; and S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 34950. See also Goodenoughs suggestion (virtually ignored subsequently) to read cathedra instead of exedra, thus turning this into a reference to a bench or perhaps a Seat of Moses ( Jewish Symbols, II, 85). See Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, II, 443 n. 773; Griths, Egypt and the Rise of the Synagogue, 910. 38. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, II, no. 432; Fuks, in ibid., 221; and A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 14044. 39. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 117, 22, 25, 27, and 24 (which mentions only the exedra). 40. Building: ibid., nos. 13, 126. Exedra: ibid., no. 28; for possible meanings of the term exedra, see Tcherikover et al., CPJ, III, 143, no. 1444; Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, 4950; and, more generally, Modrzejewski, Jews of Egypt, 96. Sundial and well: Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 115. 41. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 16, 17, 20, 27, 129. 42. Ibid., nos. 13, 28. 43. Ibid., nos. 13, 20; and ibid., nos. 28, 126, respectively. See Noy, Jewish Place of Prayer, 11822. 44. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 138. On the dekany as a burial association, see Noy, JIWE, II, no. 440. On the meaning of dekany in the Aphrodisias inscription, see Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 2830; and below, Chap. 8.
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is a reference to a meeting of a Sambathic association, perhaps in Naucratis.45 While the identication of this latter group (and if, indeed, it was even Jewish) and its precise venue remain unclear, from what we know of Ptolemaic Egypt generally, a templeor, in this case, the Jewish proseuchewould have been an obvious choice.46 Several papyri from Arsinoe contain some interesting details regarding local synagogues. One second-century c.e. document dealing with water distribution, referred to above, notes two institutions, one called a proseuche, the other an eucheion.47 The former is identied as having belonged to Theban Jews; the latter presumably belonged to the indigenous population. If this was the case, then we have here an interesting example of Theban Jews organizing their own house of worship that also served as their Landsmannschaft. A second papyrus, from the second century b.c.e., is a land survey noting that the synagogue was located on the outskirts of the town and bordered by private estates and a canalquite possibly indicating that a (the?) Jewish quarter of the town was there.48 One inscription refers to a gold crown, presumably a token of honor bestowed on someone.49 This well-known pagan practice was adopted by Diaspora Jews in both Cyrene and Asia Minor (see below), and apparently in Egypt as well. A papyrus notes a Jewish communal archive ( ) in Abusin el-Meleq that most likely was located in the local synagogue, and it is here that important documentscontracts, records of priestly lineage, wills, ocial statements, etc.were deposited.50 Local synagogues must also have had arrangements for the safekeeping of communal monies earmarked for local use or for the Jerusalem Temple.51 Finally, there is evidence that several Egyptian synagogues, one in Alexandria and the other in Naucratis, had statues. Statue bases were discovered in each, one with the explicit inscription to the synagogue ( ), the second mentioning a Sambathic association.52 Despite an attempt to explain away this phenomenon (e.g., both inscrip45. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 26 and comments on pp. 4445. 46. C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 7287. Compare this to the meeting of a dekany in the Aphrodisias inscription; see below, Chap. 8; and White, Building Gods House, 88. 47. See above, note 38; and Tcherikover et al., CPJ, II, no. 432. 48. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 134 and comments by Tcherikover on pp. 24748; A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 13839. 49. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 129; see also Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, VII, 14871; and below. 50. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, II, no. 143; see also Frey, CIJ, II, no. 775. On the importance of documents proving priestly lineage that were stored in communal archives, see Josephus, Against Apion 1, 31 36; idem, Life 6. 51. See, for example, Philo, Embassy 15657, 216, 291, 31216; idem, Special Laws 1, 77. See also Josephus, Antiquities 14, 11213, 21416, 260, 261; 16, 16072. 52. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 20, 26.
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tions deal with Judaizers and not full-edged Jews: these were people who did not share the sensibilities of some Jews about images; this was a pagan institution), we may well have here evidence of communities whose Jewish practice condoned such images, not unlike those who built and attended the third-century Nehardea (Babylonia) synagogue that also had a statue.53
Philo
The writings of Philo are of inestimable importance as a source for Alexandrian Jewry generally and for the synagogue in particular. Living at the height of this Jewrys power and prosperity and through traumaticeven cataclysmicevents that shook the community to its foundations, Philo was far from being a dispassionate and objective bystander. This commitment, added to his natural penchant for conveying a denite religious and cultural message to readers and listeners, means that one must exercise caution in evaluating many of his claims.54 For example, Philo speaks of Jews in Rome conducting regular weekly meetings on sacred Sabbaths, when they are trained in their ancestral philosophy.55 He refers to proseuchai as schools () for the inculcation of virtue, emphasizing the instructional dimension of these synagogue gatherings, which were based on scriptural readings.56 These sessions were led by a priest or elder and may have lasted for a good part of the day;57 Philo himself mentions the late afternoon as a terminus ad quem.58 With regard to the Therapeutae, Philo describes the solemnity surrounding their Sabbath observance, which likewise featured an extensive discourse oered by the senior member of the group.59 Philo portrays the synagogues religious agenda as an intensive intellectual experience, and there may be a modicum of truth to his claim. Similar frameworks for serious philo53. B Rosh Hashanah 24b. See Rajak, Jews as Benefactors, 2728. 54. Opinions regarding the reliability of Philo as a historian and commentator on current events are seriously divided; see, for example, Smallwood, Philo and Josephus, 11429; and, for an opposite view, D. R. Schwartz, Josephus and Philo, 2645. See also idem, On Drama and Authenticity in Philo and Josephus, 11329. 55. Embassy 156. 56. Moses 2, 21516; Special Laws 2, 62, 63; Embassy 312. See also On Dreams 2, 127, and Leonhardt, Jewish Worship in Philo of Alexandria, 7495. 57. See Letter of Aristeas 310. 58. Hypothetica 7, 13: And indeed they do always assemble and sit together, most of them in silence except when it is the practice to add something to signify approval of what is read. But some priest who is present or one of the elders reads the holy laws to them and expounds them point by point till about the late afternoon, when they depart having gained both expert knowledge of the holy laws and considerable advance in piety. See also below, note 61. 59. Contemplative Life 31. On Therapeutae generally, see Schrer, History, II, 59197.
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sophical discussions and study sessions were not an uncommon feature in the Roman world, and some Jewsparticularly in the various sectsmay well have created similar settings.60 The real question, however, is how widespread such a practice was. Did it engage only a Jewish intellectual elite in Alexandria, or was it typical of many Egyptian proseuchai, both in Alexandria and the chora? I am inclined to prefer the former alternative, as Philos emphasis is too unique and extreme: he alone calls the synagogue a didaskaleion. To assume that ordinary Jews would be interested in such intensive study sessions or would be willing to stay in the synagogue for much of the Sabbath day ies in the face of all we know of human nature and Jewish practice de facto.61 Philo also notes that the proseuche functioned as a repository, where funds for the Temple were collected and stored until their transfer to Jerusalem. Presumably, funds for local communal use were deposited there as well.62 In his dramatic account of the Alexandrian pogroms of 38 c.e. and their aftermath, Philo takes note of Alexandrian synagogues on a number of occasions.63 These buildings were located in every section of the city, and there was one particularly magnicent proseuche that he describes as the largest and most magnicent [ ] in the city. 64 The building was lavishly decorated with, inter alia, insignia, shields, golden crowns, stelae, and inscriptions honoring the emperor.65 By specically mentioning these accoutrements, Philo may have been indicating the loyalty of the Jewish community to Rome, thereby discounting one of the main charges brought by the Roman governor Flaccus and the Alexandrians against the Jews. Emphasizing the legal and recognized status of these buildings (Philo claims that only the Jews were so privileged by Augustus), he excoriates those perpetrating the violence and destruction as guilty of heretofore unheard of desecration and abominable acts.66 According to Philo, the desecration reached such proportions that, not only were the synagogues despoiled and in some cases
60. See Mason, Greco-Roman, Jewish, and Christian Philosophies, 1218. 61. In rst- and second-century Palestine, Jews abandoned liturgical study sessions or even intense political discussions for their Sabbath midday meal; see, for example, Josephus, Life 279; B Betzah 15b. Cf., however, A. Kasher (Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 211), who suggests that the extended scriptural readings in Egyptian synagogues, as described by Philo, originated in the desire to imitate the original reading of the Septuagint as described in the Letter of Aristeas, implying that this was practiced widely. 62. Embassy 15657, 216, 31216. See also A. Kasher, Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 217 n. 44. 63. On events in Alexandria, see Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, 5574; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 22055; Modrzejewski, Jews of Egypt, 16183. 64. Embassy 134. 65. Embassy 133. 66. On the recognized status: ibid., 13839, 311. See also Josephus, Antiquities 14, 21316. On the violence: Philo, Flaccus 41.; idem, Embassy 132.
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destroyed, but statues of the emperor as well as other images (e.g., a bronze statue of a man riding a quadriga) were introduced in direct violation of the status quo enshrined by earlier Ptolemaic and Roman rulers.67 One nal comment on Philos terminology is in order. In line with Egyptian Jewish practice, as noted above, Philo almost always (nineteen times) uses the term proseuche or a derivative.68 Nevertheless, he does use the term synagoge on two occasions.69 Moreover, Philo, too, alludes to the institutions sanctity, invoking the terms and and .70
A Rabbinic Tradition
The number of sources in rabbinic literature relating to the pre-70 Roman Diaspora is almost negligible; even rarer are the references to the Diaspora synagogue. Nevertheless, we have one most unusual pericope, and if its historicity (or a signicant part thereof ) is upheld, it would constitute a source of major importance to the subject at hand. First appearing in the third-century Tosefta, this tradition is subsequently cited, with variations, in both the Yerushalmi and the Bavli.71 Owing to its importance, I quote the Toseftan version in full:
R. Judah [b. Ilai] said: Whoever has not seen the double stoa [i.e., colonnade] of Alexandria has never in his life seen the glory of Israel. It is a kind of large basilica, a stoa within a stoa, holding, at times, twice the number of those who left Egypt. And seventy-one cathedrae [i.e., honorary chairs or thrones] of gold were there for the seventy-one elders, each of them [worth] 25 talents [of gold], and a wooden platform [ ]was in the middle. And a azzan of the synagogue [lit., assembly] stood on it with kerchiefs in his hand. When one took hold [of the Torah scroll] to read, he would wave the kerchiefs and they [i.e., those congregated] would answer Amen for each benediction; and he would again [wave the kerchiefs] and they would [again] respond Amen. And they would not sit randomly, but goldsmiths would sit by themselves, silversmiths by themselves, weavers by themselves, Tarsian weavers by themselves, and blacksmiths by themselves. And why to such an extent [i.e., why the dierentiated
67. Flaccus 43; Embassy 13435, 138. It is not clear, however, whether the desecration caused by the introduction of statues meant that the proseuche per se was considered sacred by the Jews, as has sometimes been claimed. 68. Mayer, Index Philoneus, 247. See also Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 169; A. Kasher, Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 210. 69. Embassy 311; On Dreams 2, 127. With respect to the Essenes, see Philos Every Good Man Is Free 81; idem, Special Laws 3, 171. 70. Embassy 137; Flaccus 48. The term in Special Laws 3, 171, probably refers to a pagan temple, contra Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 12930. On the other hand, when Josephus refers to in second century b.c.e. Egypt (quoting a letter from Onias to Ptolemy), he seems to mean Jewish religious buildings (temples? shrines? synagogues?); Antiquities 13, 6566. 71. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273); Y Sukkah 5, 1, 55ab; B Sukkah 51b.
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seating]? So that if a visitor comes he can [immediately] make contact with his trade, and thus he will be able to make a living [27 .]
According to the above tradition, this Alexandrian building was of colossal proportions. The statement that it could hold twice the number of those who left Egypt (i.e., 1.2 million people!) was, of course, never intended to be taken literally; it is a stock rabbinic phrase connoting a very large number of people.73 In this case, the reference is to an assembly hall of such monumental size that kerchiefs were required in order to signal the congregation when to respond. The description of the golden chairs, each worth twenty-ve talents, is probably exaggerated as well. Nevertheless, the above description is so detailed and unique that it perhaps ought not be rejected out of hand as totally fanciful, especially in light of the fact that archaeological excavations at Sardis have revealed a fourth-century and later synagogue building of monumental dimensionsits assembly hall and atrium measuring eighty meters in length (g. 11).74 This rabbinic tradition immediately calls to mind the large Alexandrian synagogue that Philo describes in his narrative of the events of 38 c.e., and it is quite plausible that both the rabbinic tradition and Philo refer to the very same building. The Toseftas description of the main hall as a kind of basilica, dyplastoon (a stoa within a stoa or a double stoa), is compatible with the architectural traditions of the period. The hall may have had rows of columns, perhaps two deep on two or four sides, thus forming a series of aisles, examples of which can be seen in the Basilica Aemilia and the Basilica Julia in Rome.75 Such
72. On this source, see the comments in Lieberman, TK, IV, 88992; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 26163; Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, I, 28485; A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 34955. See also Gordon, Basilica and the Stoa, 35962. 73. Lieberman, TK, IV, 890 n. 8. 74. Seager, Building History, 425; Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 169; While, Social Origins, 31024; and below, Chap. 8. 75. Boethius and Ward-Perkins, Etruscan and Roman Architecture, 19294. On monumental buildings in the East, particularly the Alexandrian kaisareion, see ibid., 45960.
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a multi-aisled synagogue was discovered in Byzantine Gaza (seventh century c.e.).76 As noted in Chap. 3, the rst-century proseuche in Tiberias must also have been of large proportions if meetings of the citys residents could be conducted there instead of the citys stadium.77 Another Tiberian synagogue of the third or fourth century (perhaps the same as the rst-century one) was described in rabbinic sources in a similar fashion as the one in Alexandria, namely, as a dyplastoon.78 Regarding the synagogue or community elders mentioned in the above Toseftan tradition, the number is far from unusual. While seventy clearly has a symbolic ring, the fact is that this number was adopted by many Jewish leadership bodies during this period.79 Rabbinic literature reports seventy (or seventy-one) members in the Jerusalem sanhedrin; Josephus appointed seventy leaders when organizing the Galilee in 6667 c.e.; there were seventy prominent people who represented the Jews residing in Batanaea, and the Zealots appointed seventy members to a high court in Jerusalem during the revolt.80 From an archaeological perspective, the only evidence that could possibly relate to this Alexandrian tradition of seventy-one elders comes, as mentioned, from fourth-century Sardis. At the western end of the hall were three semicircular benches, clearly intended for people of rank within the congregation. These Sardis elders, who sat on benches facing eastward, toward the center of the hall and the Torah shrine (or shrines), also may have numbered seventy, as the buildings excavators have estimated on the basis of the space available.81 Thus, the number of leaders in these two communities may have been identical, although the seating arrangement in Sardis was dierent from that indicated by the individual Alexandrian cathedrae described in the Tosefta. In the above-quoted Toseftan tradition, reference is made to a wooden platform (, bima) in the center of the hall that was used for the reading of Scriptures. Once again,
76. Ovadiah, Synagogue at Gaza, 195. 77. Josephus, Life 92, 27680, 331. 78. Midrash on Psalms 93, 8 (p. 208b). 79. Num. 11:16. On the council of elders () heading the Alexandrian community in the rst century, see Philo, Flaccus 74; Schrer, History, III, 9394; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 22733; M. Stern, Jewish Community and Institutions, 16869. For other representative bodies numbering seventy in the biblical period, see Judg. 9:2; II Kgs. 10:1. 80. M Sanhedrin 1, 6; War 2, 570; Life 14, 79; War 2, 482; Life 11, 56; and War 4, 336, respectively. Equally interesting is the fact that later on the Samaritans, too, had a governing council of seventy (lit., Family of Seventy), which was well established in Samaritan life at the time of Baba Rabbas reforms in the third century. See J. M. Cohen, Samaritan Chronicle, 70, 22829; and below, Chap. 6. On the number seventy in later rabbinic sources, see Ginzberg, Legends, VII, 429. 81. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 169; Seager, Building History, 426. Interestingly, this seating arrangement is very dierent from that prescribed in T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360), where the elders faced the congregation with their backs to the holy, i.e., the Torah shrine or the direction of Jerusalem.
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the nds at Sardis prove enlightening, as a stone table was found in the middle of the hall, toward its western end, and what may have been traces of a platform or canopy were found toward the middle.82 This custom of having a table or bima in the center of the hall was thus not uncommon in synagogues of the Roman world. In synagogues of Second Temple Judaea, such as those at Gamla, Masada, Herodium, Qiryat Sefer, and Modiin, the reading of Scriptures would also have been carried out in the center of the hall since the benches and columns on all four sides left no room for a platform at one end.83 In third-century Dura Europos as well, benches on all four sides of the room would have required setting up a table or platform in the center of the hall. In fact, the nal excavation report notes a number of depressions found in the oor in the center of the room, perhaps made by the legs of a platform that once stood there.84 One element of the above tradition that has proven as intriguing as it has elusive is the concluding section dealing with the seating arrangements in the synagogue. Each professional group seems to have sat separately. Why should professional aliation have proven so critical in this synagogue? One can indeed point to the inscriptions in Rome, where at least one synagogue appears to have been organized around a professional group,85 although most Jews, both in Rome and elsewhere, seem to have based their aliation on other criteria. Several scholars have attempted to place this Alexandrian synagogue in a setting that would explain the economic element in its seating arrangements. Krauss, followed by Fraser, has suggested that the building itself was a basilica-marketplace, a merchants hall used mainly for economic purposes but also for worship and judicial proceedings.86 Alternatively, one might posit that this Alexandrian synagogue included members of all groups but that only the artisansfor whatever reasonsat in this fashion. Once again, the Sardis synagogue may oer an interesting parallel. Located on the main street of the city, it stood adjacent to a row of shops, many of which appear to have been owned by Jews.87 One side entrance of this synagogue even joined its atrium to these shops. Might there have been a similar situation in Alexandria, and might this in some way explain the unique seating arrangements specically aecting the artisan class there? Perhaps we ought to be looking elsewhereto the non-Jewish worldfor at least a
82. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 16970. 83. See the articles of Yadin, Foerster, Gutman, and Maoz in L. Levine, Ancient Synagogues Revealed, 1941; and L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 1019. 84. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 256. 85. Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 14244. 86. S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 26163; Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, I, 285. Goodenough ( Jewish Symbols, II, 86) repeats this claim, although he is skeptical about the value of the entire tradition. 87. On representations of menorot on shops adjacent to the synagogue, see Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 17687; Hanfmann et al., Roman and Late Antique Period, 166.
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partial explanation of this phenomenon. There is a great deal of evidence, both literary and archaeological, attesting to highly structured and dierentiated seating arrangements in Roman public spaces, e.g., theaters and amphitheaters. Even during the late Republic, but especially after Augustus, there were set places for dierent Roman social and political groupings, not to speak of distinctions among foreigners, collegia, soldiers, circus factions, women, and others.88 It might well be, then, that as regards seating, the Alexandrian synagogue reected current Roman practice in large places of assembly and that rabbinic tradition noted this fact in its description. One nal issue to be addressed concerns the historicity of the above-quoted Toseftan tradition. It is quite obvious that many phrases in this source recall descriptions of the Jerusalem Temple found in Josephus as well as elsewhere in rabbinic literature. On the Temple Mount, we are told, there was a large area enclosed by a double stoa (a stoa within a stoa), at one end of which was a basilica (i.e., a royal stoa) of colossal proportions.89 The placing of the platform in the center of the Alexandrian synagogue and the custom of waving kerchiefs are likewise reminiscent of Temple practice. At the Haqhel celebration held in the Temple every seven years, a special wooden platform was constructed for the reading of the Torah;90 whenever the high priest would ociate in the daily ritual, a Temple functionary ( )would stand by the altar and signal by waving a kerchief.91 Even the opening phrase of the above-quoted tradition (Whoever has not seen the double stoa . . . of Alexandria has never in his life seen the glory of Israel) is remarkably similar to the hyperboles occasionally used in rabbinic literature when introducing Templerelated matters.92 Therefore, it is quite in place to ask whether these literary parallels do not, in eect, undermine the historical veracity of our source. Perhaps the transmitter of the Alexandrian synagogue description, R. Judah b. Ilai (or someone before him), had collected a series of phrases that originally related to the Temple and appended them to a description of the well-known Alexandrian synagogue, even though they had no basis in reality.93
88. See Suetonius, Augustus 44. For a discussion of the various social groups, see Rawson, Discrimina Ordinvm: The Lex Julia Theatralis, 83114; Small, Social Correlations to the Greek Cavea, 8593; Rouech, Aphrodisias in Late Antiquity, 21826; Edmondson, Dynamic Arena, 81111; Van Nijf, Civic World, 20940. My thanks to Zeev Weiss for bringing several of these references to my attention. See also MacMullen, Roman Social Relations, 7179. 89. Y Sukkah 5, 1, 55a; Y Taanit 3, 11, 66d; B Sukkah 45a. See also Josephus, War 5, 190; idem, Antiquities 15, 396, 41116. 90. M Sotah 7, 8. 91. M Tamid 7, 3. 92. For instance: Whoever has not seen the Temple standing has never seen a magnicent building B Sukkah 51b; Whoever has not seen Herods Temple has never seen a beautiful buildingB Bava Batra 4a. 93. The tendency to project descriptions of the Temple (not to speak of Temple practices) onto the synagogue is widespread in rabbinic literature. See, for example, R. Isaacs assertion that the phrase miq-
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Perhaps, but I think not. In the rst place, why would someone (presumably in secondcentury Roman Palestine) want or need to invent such an exaggerated depiction? If it was, indeed, such a blatant fabrication, why would R. Judah or the editors of the Tosefta even bother to report it? Furthermore, the parallels noted above, from both Philo and Sardis, lend a measure of plausibility to the assumption that some such building might have existed in as powerful and wealthy a community as that of rst-century Alexandria. The fact that there are so many allusions to the Jerusalem Temple in the description of this synagogue may not necessarily be due to literary style but rather to a historical reality resulting from either a common architectural tradition that inuenced both Alexandrian and Jerusalem Jews or, what seems more likely, a conscious attempt by Alexandrian Jews to emulate the form and patterns of Herods Temple in their large synagogue. It should be remembered that this seems to be what Onias IV did when building his temple in Leontopolis in the second century b.c.e. 94 There may be other indications of the adoption of Temple-related practices by Egyptian synagogues,95 and if this was the case, then the Toseftan literary parallels point to a very signicant historical reality: the imitation of some Temple-related architectural forms in at least one important Diaspora synagogue (see above, Chap. 3).96
BERENICE (CYRENE)
Three important communal inscriptions relating to the synagogue were found in this North African city, and together they contain not a few surprises.97 First and foremost is the very nature of these Greek inscriptions, which are decrees of the local Jewish polidash meat in Ezek. 11:16 refers to the synagogue (B Megillah 29a). The dierence, of course, is that in our case the reference relates to a particular place and time. 94. Josephus, Antiquities 12, 388; 13, 63, 67, 72; 20, 236; idem, War 1, 33. Cf., however, ibid., 7, 427. 95. See A. Kasher, Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 20520; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 23354; Runesson, Origins, 43659. Moreover, the claim that R. Judah was using a current Palestinian model anachronistically is dicult. It seems rather far-fetched, to say the least, that in the wake of the various unsuccessful rebellions and the resultant economic and social upheavals something as monumental as the building described here existed or was under construction in second-century Palestine. In all probability, Jews at that time would not have been able to aord such a structure, and the assumption that Galilean-type synagogues were being built around that time, in the mid second century, is no longer valid. Therefore, a claim for anachronism is hardly credible; see Krautheimer, Constantinian Basilica, 12324 and n. 22; Gutmann, Ancient Synagogues: Archaeological Fact, 22627; Fine, This Holy Place, 4345. 96. T Sukkah 4, 6. This source was not cited by Binder in his Into the Temple Courts, which is unfortunate. Since one of his aims was to show Temple inuence over synagogues everywhere, such a tradition might have been helpful. In any case, the thesis is very problematic in its own right. See above, Chap. 3. 97. On the history of the Jewish community of Cyrene generally, see Applebaum, Jews and Greeks, 130.; Hirschberg, History of the Jews in North Africa, I, 2186.
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teuma honoring various individuals who had beneted it in one way or another. These decrees not only refer to the same community but span a period of approximately sixty-ve years, thus oering a repeated glimpse into the workings and concerns of this synagogue. Moreover, the inscriptions refer to the synagogue as an institution (or, as we shall see, they also use an alternative term) and therefore furnish precious information in this regard.98 The earliest of these inscriptions, discovered several centuries ago, is the most poorly preserved of the three. It records a resolution of the Jewish community (referred to here as a politeuma) and its archons to honor one Decimus Valerius Dionysios in gratitude for his benefactions. The following is the text of the inscription:
In the year [?] 3, on the 5th of Phamenoth, in the archonship of Arimmas son of . . . , Dorion son of Ptolemaios, Zelaios son of Gnaius, Ariston son of Araxa . . . , Sarapion son of Andromachos, Nikias son of . . . , . . . son of Simon. Whereas Dec[i]mus Valerius Dionysios son of Gaius . . . remains a noble and good man in word and deed . . . , doing whatever good he can, both in a public capacity and as a private individual, to each one of the citizens, and in particular plastering the oor of the amphitheater and painting its walls, the archons and the politeuma of the Jews at Berenice resolved to register him in the . . . of the . . . and [resolved] that he be exempted from liturgies of every kind; and likewise [they resolved] to crown him with an olive wreath and a woolen llet, mentioning his name at each assembly and at the New Moon. After engraving this resolution on a stele of Parian marble the archons are to set it in the most visible place in the amphitheater. All [the stones cast were] white [i.e., the decision was unanimous]. Dec[i]mus Valerius Dionysios son of Gaius plastered the oor of the amphitheater and painted [its walls] at his own expense as a contribution to the politeuma.99
Dating to the end of the rst century b.c.e.,100 this inscription is remarkable on a number of counts. We learn that the Jewish community was led by archons and organized as a politeuma.101 At one stage it was assumed that this term reected the usual form of Jewish communal organization in the Greco-Roman Diaspora; however, this view has been called into question of late, particularly with regard to the Alexandrian and the larger Egyptian community.102 Nevertheless, the evidence is clear-cut, at least from Berenice;
98. Published originally by Roux and Roux (Dcret de politeuma des juifs, 28196), these inscriptions have been analyzed by Reynolds (Inscriptions, 24247) and Lderitz (Corpus jdischer Zeugnisse aus der Cyrenaika, 14758). See also G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 2029; White, Social Origins, 296300; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 25763. 99. Translation based on G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 203, with some changes. 100. Roux and Roux (Dcret de politeuma des juifs, 28889) date this inscription to 86 b.c.e., assuming the missing letter is iota (= 10) or, more likely, kappa (= 20) and that the era is that of Actium (31 b.c.e.). 101. Cf., however, the problematic suggestion by Lderitz (What Is the Politeuma? 183225), who denes politeuma here as the Jewish oligarchy or ruling body, and not the community as a whole. 102. See, for example, Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, 6, 9, 32, 61; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 225
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such a form of communal organization did, in fact, exist there. It is well attested throughout antiquity, in all parts of the Diaspora, that archons often stood at the head of a Jewish community.103 Four of the six preserved personal names of these archons are Greek; of the patronyms, four are in Greek, two are entirely missing, and one (Simon) is of Jewish derivation. The name of the honoree, Decimus Valerius Dionysios, son of Gaius, bears a Roman stamp, and he appears to have been a Roman citizen. If this is the case, then a number of other issues connected with his name are unclear: Why is no tribal status noted? Was his father also a Roman citizen? Was he a freedman? What was his connection (ocial or otherwise) to the Jewish community? 104 In fact, it appears certain that Decimus was a member of the politeuma, since the decree notes that he was to be exempt from communal liturgies. The honor accorded him consisted of an olive crown and a llet, and the mention of his name at each assembly and on the New Moon. This assembly may well refer to the Sabbath gathering, well known in rst-century sources. However, taking special note of a monthly meeting is unusual, as New Moon celebrations are unknown elsewhere in the Diaspora.105 The reference to Decimus signicant impact on many people (the citizens of Berenice generally? the Jewish community only?) may have been due to his position as a public ocial. Specically, he is recognized as having contributed to the Jewish community by plastering the oor of the amphitheater and painting its walls. One of Decimus benefactions, the painting of walls, is most intriguing. The Greek word conveys two possible meanings: to paint generally or to paint gures (human or animal). If the former was intended, then the paintings may have been similar to more or less contemporary ones at Pompeii, Jerusalem, or Masada.106 If the latter was intended, then the amphitheater would have boasted more striking decorations (gural images?); were it a synagogue, as will be argued below, then the decorations might have been similar to what has been found in other Diaspora synagogues, such as the third-century walls at Dura Europos or the sixth-century mosaic oor at ammam Lif in North Africa.107 At this juncture, however, certitude is elusive.
33, 35960; A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 29. See the recent discussion and bibliography on this issue in Zuckerman, Hellenistic Politeumata and the Jews, 17185; Hnigman, Birth of a Diaspora, 9398; Lderitz, What Is the Politeuma? 183225. 103. See below, Chap. 11. 104. See Reynolds, Inscriptions, 24647; Lderitz, Corpus jdischer Zeugnisse aus der Cyrenaika, 151. 105. The juxtaposition of regular (i.e., Sabbath) meetings and those of the New Moon in this and the following inscription (see below) is intriguing, but elusive; see Judith 8:6; McKay, Sabbath and Synagogue, 1142. 106. Pompeii: Brion, Pompeii and Herculaneum, 20130. Jerusalem: Avigad, Discovering Jerusalem, 81. Masada: NEAEHL, III, 973., and generally Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 6583. 107. See below, Chap. 8. On the murals in the rst-century synagogue at Acmonia (Asia Minor), see
99
Perhaps the most engaging detail in this inscription is the thrice-mentioned term amphitheater: To what does it refer? Was it a civic building that served all citizens as a place of sports, entertainment, or assembly? Or was this the synagogue of the Jewish politeuma? Those who have addressed the issue have formulated three distinct approaches. Schrer, Goodenough, Caputo, Gabba, Horsley, and Zuckerman assume that this was a regular Roman amphitheater;108 Robert, Applebaum, Cohen, M. Stern, Rajak, and Barclay assume it was a Jewish public building;109 Hirschberg, Roux, Reynolds, Lderitz, and White are less committal.110 The major arguments in favor of regarding the amphitheater as a civic building are as follows: the term itself suggests that interpretation; the decorations involved are attested in public entertainment buildings elsewhere in North Africa; Jews are known to have frequented theaters and amphitheaters and thus may well have contributed funds to them; the inscription also notes Decimus Valerius Dionysios benevolence to all citizens of the city; the Jews of Cyrene were quite hellenized, and therefore erecting a stele in a civic building might constitute but one more example of their acculturation; the amphitheater was probably a well-enough-established institution in the late rst century b.c.e. as to preclude applying the name to a dierent type of building. On the other hand, the following considerations argue for identifying the amphitheater as a specically Jewish building: Why should a prominent Jew have been responsible for or have seen t to repair and plaster the oor of a city amphitheater? Moreover, the usual Roman amphitheater is not known to have had plastered oors. Would the Jews have been able to place their own stele in a civic institution, and why would they have wanted to place their communal inscriptions in a public arena? And if Dionysios benecence was not related to them, why would the Jewish community have honored him for it? The amphitheater was still not a functionally well-dened institution at this time, and consequently the name could well have been used for other institutions, in this case a synagogue.111 Moreover, the last lines of the inscription indicate that Decimus Valerius
below. The same root, , appears on a third- or fourth-century sarcophagus from Rome to designate the profession of Eudoxius (Noy, JIWE, II, no. 277). 108. Schrer, History, III, 104; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 14344; XII, 52 n. 11; Caputo, Nota sugli edici teatrali della Cirenaica, 28385; Gabba, Iscrizioni Greche e Latine, 63.; G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 2089; Zuckerman, Hellenistic Politeumata and the Jews, 179. 109. Robert, Gladiateurs, 34 n. 1; Applebaum, Jews and Greeks, 16467; idem, Organization of Jewish Communities, 48688; S. J. D. Cohen, From the Maccabees to the Mishnah, 10910; M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 135; Rajak, Jews as Benefactors, 2830; Barclay, Jews in the Mediterranean Diaspora, 237; Baldwin Bowsky, M. Tittius, 507; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 14045. 110. Hirschberg, History of the Jews in North Africa, I, 26; Roux and Roux, Dcret de politeuma des juifs, 29092; Reynolds, Inscriptions, 247; Lderitz, Corpus jdischer Zeugnisse aus der Cyrenaika, 155; White, Social Origins, 297 n. 36. Cf., however, Lderitzs comments in What Is the Politeuma? 213, where he seems much more comfortable with a Jewish identication. 111. On the architectural uidity of the Roman amphitheater prior to the Flavian era and the building
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Dionysios gift was given to the politeuma, thus conrming that this was most probably a Jewish building. A second inscription from Berenice (see below) likewise associates the Jewish community with an amphitheater, further reinforcing this connection. If, on the other hand, the amphitheater was a civic institution, then why were the Jews using it regularly for their communal purposes? 112 Certitude in this matter is impossible. We read of no remotely similar occurrence elsewhere in antiquity. As we are dealing here with obviously Jewish communal matters, the use of the term amphitheater for a Jewish building is most unusual, to say the least. However, to assume that this inscription refers to honors bestowed by the Jews on one of their own in return for benefactions to the citys amphitheater, and then to call this a contribution () to the politeumata, would require an enormous stretch of the imagination. It seems, therefore, that we are indeed dealing here with a Jewish institution.113 We cannot be sure why exactly it was called an amphitheater. The most likely explanation is that the name was related to the shape of the building. The word seems to indicate a circular or elliptical structure where the audience sits in the round, or, per Dionysios of Halicarnassus, it could refer to a U-shaped building with seating on three sides.114 Serving as a meeting place for the community, this amphitheater qua synagogue had to have adequate seating arrangements. We possess no information regarding its location in the city. Applebaum once suggested a site outside the city wall to the south, but later retracted this in light of subsequent excavations.115 The second Berenice inscription, from 2425 c.e.,116 contains a further resolution of
of the colosseum, see Golvin, Lamphithtre romain, I, 26872. Humphrey (Amphitheatrical HippoStadia, 122) writes: In the Late Republic and early Empire, the terminology for Roman entertainment buildings, and especially for the building that we would later know as the amphitheater, was still in ux. Welch, in Roman Amphitheatres Revived, 273, notes: The Colosseum canonized the Roman amphitheatre as an architectural form. Amphitheatres securely dated after it (e.g., Capua) self-consciously refer to it in the same way that circuses throughout the empire looked back to the Circus Maximus. On the early evolution of the amphitheater, however, Welch adopts a dierent approach than that of Golvin; see idem, Arena in Late-Republican Italy, 69. 112. On the other hand, theaters, amphitheaters, and stadiums were often used for meetings of the citizenry as a whole, as in AlexandriaJosephus, War 2, 49091; Antiochibid., 7, 47; EphesusActs 19:29; TiberiasJosephus, Life 331. 113. See M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 135. 114. See, for example, his description of the old Circus Maximus as a U-shaped building in Roman Antiquities 3, 68, 3; and comments by Cary, LCL, II, 24243 n. 2. See also Humphrey, Amphitheatrical Hippo-Stadia, 12223. It is interesting to note that in the fourth century c.e. Epiphanius speaks of Samaritans imitating the Jews by building a synagogue which is shaped like a theater and thus is open to the sky (Panarion 80, 1, 6). 115. Applebaum, Jewish Community, 15962; idem, Jews and Greeks, 194. 116. For an earlier dating, see Baldwin Bowsky, M. Tittius, 5046.
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the communitythis time in the name of nine archons and the politeuma at largetaken on the festival of Sukkot. The inscription notes the honors bestowed upon a Roman ocial, Marcus Tittius, for his support of the Jewish community, as well as for his kindness to the Greek citizens of the city.
Year 55. Phaoph 25. At the gathering of the Festival of Tabernacles during the terms of oce of the archons: Cleandros son of Stratonicos Euphranor son of Ariston Sosigenes son of Sosippos Andromachos son of Andromachos Marcus Laelius Onasion son of Apollonios Philonides son of Hagemon Autochles son of Zenon Sonicos son of Theodotos Josephos son of Straton Since Marcus Tittius 117 son of Sextus [from the tribe of ] Aemilia, a goodly and worthy man, who has assumed the responsibility of government in public aairs and who has exercised management of these matters benevolently and rightly, and has always displayed in his conduct a gentle character on all occasions; and not only does he give of himself unstintingly in these matters to those citizens [of the city generally] who entreat him in private, but also to the Jews of our politeuma, publicly and privately, he has been supportive in his governance and has not ceased, in his own noble goodness, behaving in a worthy manner. Now, therefore, the archons and politeuma of the Jews in Berenice have decided to praise him by name and dedicate to him at each assembly and new moon [celebration] a wreath of olive branches and a woolen llet; and [it has been decided] that the archons are to record this resolution on a stele of Parian marble and set it up in the most prominent place in the amphitheater. All [the stones cast] were white.118
The dating of this document seems certain: the year 55 apparently relates to the Actium era, i.e., 2425 c.e. 119 The document is clearly a Jewish one. It begins with a list of archons and a decree taken on the Sukkot holiday.120 The benefactions of Marcus Tittius to the Jews may have been appreciably more signicant than those he bestowed on the Greeks; at least the Jews seem to have thought so. That such a declaration was made by the Jew117. On the spelling of this name, see Reynolds, Inscriptions, 245. On the honoree, see Baldwin Bowsky, M. Tittius, 495. 118. For the Greek text, see the references in note 98. 119. However, Lderitz (What Is the Politeuma? 212) has suggested an earlier date43 b.c.e., as has Baldwin Bowsky13 b.c.e. (M. Tittius, 5046). 120. Might this Sukkot meeting time be related to a reference in a later Christian source, stating that Jewish archons were elected annually in September (Tishri)? See Schrer, History, III, 99; and below, Chap. 8. See also the reference to Sukkot by Plutarch (Quaestiones Convivales, IV, 6, 2 (GLAJJ, I, 557); as well as Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 235 n. 61.
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ish community at its regular weekly (?) and monthly meetings in the amphitheater once again suggests that this was a Jewish building. The inscription provides clear evidence of the salutary rapport enjoyed by the Jewish community with this Roman ocial. Moreover, the communitys willingness to publicly proclaim these excellent relations, orally and in writing, is striking evidence of its self-condence and rapport vis--vis the authorities. The fact that the favors bestowed by Marcus Tittius do not appear to have been at the expense of, or opposed by, the local citizenry but were part of his overall policy reinforces the impression thatat this juncture, at leastthe Jews were on good terms with their Greek neighbors and Romes representatives. This had not always been the case, as a letter from Marcus Agrippa to the polis of Cyrene some four decades earlier attests.121 The use of wreaths and llets indicates the imitation of the Greek custom in bestowing honors, as does dedicating a stele in a public building. There is no more striking evidence of this acculturation than the names of the nine archons and their fathers. Of the twenty names, nineteen are Greek or Roman and only one (Josephos) is Jewish. It is noteworthy that these Greek names (as in the other two inscriptions) were popular in pagan Cyrene.122 Together with the Greek language, the other elements in this inscriptionthe year and month, the voting process (casting white stones), its formulary announcement, the designation politeuma, and the ways in which honor was bestowedall point to a community comfortably ensconced in its larger Greco-Roman milieu.123 Once again, we are informed of the communitys appointed times for honoring Tittius. It would seem that the regular assembly was on the Sabbath, and additional meetings were held at the beginning of each month. At least part of these assemblies undoubtedly included a liturgical element; to what extent, if at all, these gatherings dealt with secular communal matters is unknown. If they did, then such a combination would be reminiscent of Josephus account of events in Tiberias at the outbreak of the revolt in 66 c.e. 124 It is of interest that major gatherings of the community took place on the Sukkot festival, when important decisions such as the one recorded in the above inscription were made. A third inscription, from 55 c.e., commemorates a series of donations made by at least eighteen individuals (part of the slab is broken and part is missing) for restoring their synagogue (here referred to as a ):
121. Josephus, Antiquities 16, 16061, 16970; Pucci Ben Zeev, Jewish Rights in the Roman World, 27380. Hirschbergs suggestion, that Tittius was honored because he implemented the Imperial edicts recorded by Josephus, is problematic owing to the time gap between the decree and the writing of the inscription; see his History of the Jews in North Africa, I, 2526. 122. Reynolds, Inscriptions, 24445; Applebaum, Jewish Community, 163. 123. See Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, II, 484 and n. 781. 124. Life 276303; and above, Chap. 3.
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The year 2 of Nero Claudius Caesar Drusius Germanicus Imperator on 6 Choiak: It has been decided by the community [] of Jews in Berenice that those donating towards the restoration of the synagogue building [] be inscribed on a stele of Parian marble: Zenion son of Zoilos archon 10 dr[achmae] Isidoros son of Dositheos archon 10 dr. Dositheos son of Ammonios archon 10 dr. Pratis son of Jonathan archon 10 dr. Karnedas son of Cornelius archon 10 dr. Heracleides son of Heracleides archon 10 dr. Thaliarchos son of Dositheos archon 10 dr. Sosibios son of Jason archon 10 dr. Pratomedes son of Socrates archon 10 dr. Antigonos son of Straton archon 10 dr. Kartisthenes son of Archias priest 10 dr. Lysanias son of Lysanias 25 dr. Zenodoros son of Theuphilos 28 dr. Mar . . . [son of ] 25 dr. Alexander son of Euphranor 5 dr. Isidora daughter of Serapion 5 dr. Zosima daughter of Terpolios 5 dr. Polon son of Dositheos 5 dr.125
Compared with the two previous inscriptions, this one is unique in a number of ways. The list of donors reveals a wealth of names unmatched in the other Cyrenian inscriptions. Once again, Greek names predominate, with many characteristic Greek Cyrenian (Karnedas, Kartisthenes, Pratis, Pratomedes), Egyptian (Ammonios, Serapion), Roman (Cornelius), and Hebrew ( Jonathan) names. Of the eighteen donors, the rst ten are archonsas compared to seven and nine in the two earlier inscriptionsa factor that may indicate growth in the local Jewish community or perhaps only an administrative reorganization that had taken place in the three decades between the second and third inscriptions. Either of these alternatives is possible, although the latter option is supported by the fact that the word synagoge appears twice here, once denoting the community (instead of the previously used term, politeuma) and once with reference to the building (instead of amphitheater). The above terms ( politeuma-synagogue; amphitheater-synagogue) may have been synonymous,126 and thus no great signicance is to be attributed to the change in nomenclature.
125. For the Greek text, see above, note 98; and Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 100. See Reynolds, Inscriptions, 244; Applebaum, Jewish Community, 163 and esp. n. 152. 126. See A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 181.
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It is less likely that these terms refer to two distinct Jewish frameworks existing side by side in the city.127 We can only speculate as to the reasons for the communitys decision to change its nomenclature. Was it assuming a more Jewish posture; i.e., were these new terms now considered more Jewishly identiable and signicant? This line of reasoning, however, is not borne out by the names of the community leaders or the language of the inscription, where the Greek component remains strong. Perhaps the Jews right to be called a politeuma was revoked? Was the term amphitheater for the building now associated more with a sports arena and thus became inappropriate for a Jewish public edice? It may also be the case that the Jewish community underwent some farreaching changesinternally and externallyin the rst century c.e.; however, any such changes remain unknown.128 In any case, we can assume rather condently that in all three inscriptions the main body of Berenice Jewry, and not some marginal group, is the subject at hand; each appears to speak on behalf of the citys entire Jewish community. The third inscription also raises several points of interest with regard to the people and sums of money mentioned. First among the non-archons on the list is a priest, perhaps owing to his lineage and prominent status in the community; this is reminiscent of Philos reference to a priest presiding over Sabbath instruction as well as of Jerusalems Theodotos inscription.129 Moreover, several Jewish women are mentioned as donors, a phenomenon attested for rst-century Asia Minor and one that recurs with greater frequency in later antiquity, especially in the Diaspora.130 Finally, the sums of money recorded are generally quite modest, although it is impossible to know whether this is signicant regarding the economic and political status of the Jewish community in the mid-fties.
ITALY Ostia
Although the Ostia synagogue as it stands today dates from the fourth century c.e., there are several earlier stages in the buildings history.131 Most of the extant building existed for at least several centuries: the main hall, adjacent areas to the east, the triclinium, and parts of other walls. All underwent extensive renovations over time, including those sections that were added to the original structure. Nevertheless, there is gen127. Perhaps, as in second-century b.c.e. Memphis, where the terms politeuma and synagoge appear simultaneously; see Rappaport, Idumens en Egypte, 7382. See also Applebaum, Jews and Greeks, 162 n. 149. 128. See Applebaum, New Jewish Inscription, 172. 129. See above; and Chap. 3. 130. See below, Chap. 14. 131. On the earlier stages of this building, see Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 25; Fortis, Jews and Synagogues, 12425; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 49899; White, Building Gods House, 69; idem, Social Origins, 37982; idem, Synagogue and Society, 2738.
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eral agreement that the earliest traces of the building hail back to the rst century c.e.; whether or not it was a synagogue at this stage is a hotly contested point of dispute among scholars.132 The synagogue itself was located on the outskirts of the city, near the city wall and close to the sea, a pattern adopted by other Diaspora Jewish communities as well (see below, Chap. 9).
Rome
Our knowledge of synagogues in Rome derives primarily from the rich epigraphical evidence found in the local Jewish catacombs. Originally attributed to the rst centuries c.e., these nds have been reevaluated over the past decade, resulting in a general consensus that dates them from the third to fth centuries c.e. 133 Nevertheless, some of the synagogues referred to probably existed already in the rst century c.e. There are four likely candidates, three of which were apparently named after prominent rst-century Romans: Augustus, Agrippa, and Volumnius. The fourth is called the synagogue of the Hebrews, perhaps so-named because it was the rst Jewish congregation in the city.134 In addition, one literary source clearly relates to the rst-century synagogues of Rome Philos description of the Roman community in his Embassy. In noting the benecence of Augustus to the Jews generally, and to those in the capital city in particular, he writes:
How then did he [Augustus] show his approval? He was aware that the great section of Rome on the other side of the Tiber is occupied and inhabited by Jews, most of whom were emancipated Roman citizens. For having been brought as captives to Italy they were liberated by their owners and were not forced to violate any of their native institutions. He knew therefore that they have houses of prayer [ proseuchai] and meet together in them, particularly on the sacred sabbaths when they receive as a body a training in their ancestral philosophy. He knew, too, that they collect money for sacred purposes from their rst-fruits, and send them to Jerusalem by persons who would oer the sacrices. Yet, nevertheless, he neither ejected them from Rome nor deprived them of their Roman citizenship because they were careful
132. On the buildings history and the alternative reconstructions, see below, Chap. 8. 133. Rutgers, berlegungen zu den jdischen Katakomben, 14057. 134. La Piana, Foreign Groups, 35456; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 14042, 14749, 15759; M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 16667; van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 8689. Synagogues of the Hebrews were also found in Philadelphia in Lydia (see Frey, CIJ, II, no. 754; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 162) and Corinth (Frey, CIJ, I, no. 718), and a synagogue of the Jews is attested in Reggio di Calabria (ibid., no. 635b; Noy, JIWE, I, no. 139). For a review of the interpretations of the term Hebrews, see Harvey, Synagogues of the Hebrews, 13247. It is indeed unusual that Jews would name their synagogues after prominent Romans; even in Ptolemaic Egypt, proseuchai were dedicated to rulers but not named after them. The high regard in which the Jews held these rulers (and perhaps were dependent upon them) is certainly reected in this practice, just as it is in Philos encomium to Augustus cited above. See now Richardson (Augustan-Era Synagogues in Rome, 1729), who suggests that there were perhaps ve early synagogues, including that of the Herodians.
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Philos description of the Roman proseuchai is fascinating. The problem, of course, is determining how much here is Philos projection of Alexandrian practices and terminology onto Romes Jewry and how much actually accords with the Jewish scene in the Imperial capital during the rst century c.e. If later catacomb evidence can provide a clue, it would seem that Philos use of the term proseuche is out of place here. Epigraphical evidence from the catacombs indicates that the Jews of Rome used the term synagoge with but rare exception.136 But since these inscriptions date by and large from the third to fth centuries, it is also possible that the nomenclature had changed by then. In this vein, we should also note that Juvenal, in the early second century, likewise used the term proseuche in discussing the local Jewish community.137 Nevertheless, Philos description of these Roman synagogues and their practices seems to correspond with what we know about other Jewish communal frameworks at the time: the Jews possessed a communal building, met regularly, especially on the Sabbaths, designated study as the focal liturgical activity, and sent funds (i.e., the rstfruits) to Jerusalem.138 In short, although we cannot be entirely certain of Philos accuracy, this information should not be rejected out of hand. In fact, Philos description of the status of Romes Jewish community, in its general outline, is corroborated by Josephus. In a decree directed to the citizens of Delos, Josephus records the following: For example, Gaius Caesar, our consular praetor, by edict forbade religious societies to assemble in the city [i.e., Rome itself ], but these people alone he did not forbid to do so or to collect contributions of money or to hold common meals. 139 The rights thus enjoyed by Romes Jewish communityto assemble, collect monies, and hold communal mealswere rmly xed and were the basis of Jewish communal life. Moreover, the granting of such privileges was an exception to general policy. According to this document at least, only the Jews were accorded such recognition, at rst
135. Embassy 15557. 136. Frey, CIJ, I, no. 531; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 139. 137. Satires III, 296 (M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 99). 138. Philo may have accorded his last point special prominence given the overall agenda of Embassy, i.e., to demonstrate the sanctity and centrality of the Jerusalem Temple for Jews everywhere. Still, it is doubtful whether Philo would have invented such practices rather than merely highlight certain existing customs for his purposes. See also Embassy 31216. 139. Antiquities 14, 215; and comments in Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 135 n. 52; Rajak, Jewish Rights, 2324.
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by Julius Caesar and later by Julius Gaius.140 In reality, however, many groups in Rome functioned in a similar fashion in the rst century c.e., whether ocially or unocially. Their rights, however, were not always guaranteed and their fortunes might uctuate over time; some political and religious collegia were forbidden, others were declared licita, and still others existed surreptitiously.141 Of interest regarding Romes synagogues is another statement made by Philo, that the Jews tended to live together in the Transtiberine (Trastevere) region, much as Alexandrian Jewry concentrated in two of that citys ve districts.142 It appears that of the eleven or more synagogues mentioned in the catacomb inscriptions, at least seven were located in the Transtiberine area.143 But just as some Alexandrian Jews were to be found in other quarters of the city as well,144 such was the case in Rome, too. In fact, the discovery of Jewish catacombs in dierent directions outside the city walls might argue for such a spread, at least at a later period.145
DELOS
Discovered in the early part of the twentieth century, the building at Delos, an Aegean island lying to the south and east of the Greek mainland, has been a subject of debate for decades. Only since the 1970s has a consensus emerged that the building was a synagogue, the earliest known to date and the only building complex securely identied as such from the pre-70 Diaspora.146 It is unclear precisely when the local Jewish community built or acquired this building. It is generally agreed that the site functioned as a synagogue at least from the rst century b.c.e. until the second century c.e., and that the structure did not undergo any far-reaching alterations during this period. There is little agreement, however, as to when it rst became a synagogue. The controversy involves the degree to which the structure
140. See below, note 167. On Caesars attitude toward collegia generally, see Suetonius, Iulius 42, 3: He dissolved all guilds, except those of ancient foundation. 141. See La Piana, Foreign Groups, 183. On Jewish rights, especially in comparison with those of other peoples, see Pucci Ben Zeev, Caesar and Jewish Law, 2837. 142. Philo, Flaccus 55. Cf., however, War 2, 495, where Josephus claims that the Jews were particularly concentrated in the Delta quarter, a claim indirectly borne out in the papyri; see Tcherikover et al., CPJ, II, nos. 194, 200, 202, 209, 212, 213, 221. 143. M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 167; and below, Chap. 8. 144. Philo, Embassy 132. 145. M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 16568; and below, Chap. 8. 146. Overviews of the history of this debate have been oered on a number of occasions; see, for example, Bruneau, Recherches sur les cultes de Dlos, 486.; idem, Les Isralites de Dlos, 48995; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 491; White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 13740; idem, Social Origins, 332 42. See also Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 7175.
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12. Plan of the Delos synagogue. Room A functioned as the main assembly hall. Note the benches along two walls and the chair in the middle of the western wall.
suered damages, if at all, following Mithridates conquest of the city in 88 b.c.e. On the one hand, some believe that the rebuilding was substantive, and that only afterwards was a synagogue established there. Beforehand, it is opined that the building was used for other purposes, either as a private home (White) or a pagan cultic hall (Runesson).147 On the other hand, some believe that the building functioned as a synagogue even earlier, and thus dates from the second or perhaps even the late third, century b.c.e. (Trmper).148 Still others have left the issue open (Bruneau, Binder).149 The synagogue was located on the eastern shore of the island, far from the main harbor and city center.150 The complex, measuring 28.30 by 30.70 meters (g. 12), comprised three parts: (1) a tristoa (or atrium) facing eastward with remains of a marble stylobate and marble benches (C); (2) a large room subsequently divided into two (A and B). Room A had a triportal entrance, marble benches, as well as a carved marble chair and niche on its western wall; and (3) a series of small rooms in the southern part of the building (D) under which lay a large water reservoir.151
147. Private quarters: Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 493; White, Social Origins, 33637; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 3539, and others. Pagan cultic hall: Runesson, Origins, 186 87. 148. Trmper, Oldest Original Synagogue, 51398. 149. Bruneau, Les Isralites de Dlos, 49599; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 31415. 150. Bruneau, Recherches sur les cultes de Dlos, pl. A; idem, Les Isralites de Dlos, 466; White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 156. 151. For a description of the remains, see Plassart, Synagogue juive de Dlos, 2015; Bruneau, Re-
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The identication of the Delos building as a synagogue is based on a number of factors, some of secondaryif not negligibleimportance, others more consequential. The former category includes the following considerations: Jews were already living in Delos in the later Hellenistic period; the building was located close to the sea, as was customary in many communities; there was a large hall with benches; the marble chair was possibly a Seat of Moses; the building plan has some characteristics reminiscent of Galilean-type synagogues (e.g., a triportal entrance); the building faced east, toward Jerusalem; fragments of water basins were found; rosette decorations were used; and the cistern found there might have functioned as a miqveh. These above considerations, however, are not of equal weight; some are insignicant, others speculative or simply wrong. The most telling evidence with respect to the buildings identication as a synagogue comes from the inscriptions found in or near the building. Four were inscribed on column bases of votaries found in Rooms A and B,152 each mentioning Theos Hypsistos:
[ ] Zosas of Paras to Theos Hypsistos [gave this in fulllment of ] a vow. [ ] Laodice to Theos Hypsistos, who saved him from his inrmities, [gave this in fulllment of ] a vow. [ ] Lysimachus, on his own behalf, [made] a thanks-oering to Theos Hypsistos. [ ] To Hypsistos, a vow, Marcia.153
A fth inscription, found in a house nearby, mentions a proseuche: Agathocles and Lysimachus [have made a contribution] to the proseuche. 154 As noted above, both termsproseuche and theos hypsistoscould have been used in a pagan context, but this was not usually, or likely to be, the case.155 Thus, when combined with some of the ancillary considerations mentioned above, the identication of the building as a Jewish proseuche becomes compelling.156 The absence of Jewish symbols and a Torah shrine has rightfully been dismissed as irrelevant. There is no reason to assume that such an early synagogue building would have had them; places like Gamla, Masada, and Herodium did not.157
cherches sur les cultes de Dlos, 48184; White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 14752; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 297317. With regard to architectural matters relating to the synagogue, see the comprehensive and thorough treatment of Trmper, Oldest Original Synagogue, 51398. 152. There is speculation as to what these bases once carried: gurines? incense altars? 153. These inscriptions appear in Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 72730; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 47; Bruneau, Recherches sur les cultes de Dlos, 484; White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 139 n. 25; idem, Social Origins, 33840; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 303. 154. Frey, CIJ, I, no. 726; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 3; White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 140 n. 28. A sixth, very fragmentary inscription (Frey, CIJ, I, no. 731) contributes nothing in this regard. 155. See, for example, M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 29495, 569. See also C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 5572. 156. See Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 175; Robert, Inscriptions grecques de Sid, 44. 157. See above, Chap. 3; and the summaries of Bruneau, Goodenough, and Kraabel cited above, note 146.
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The likelihood that this building was, in fact, a proseuche is signicantly enhanced by the discovery and publication in the early 1980s of two inscriptions found about one hundred meters to the north. Inscribed on marble stelae, they reveal the existence of a Samaritan community in the third and second centuries b.c.e. Calling themselves the Israelites on Delos, who make oerings to the sacred Mount Gerizim (lit., Argarizein), these Samaritans honored several benefactors of their community:
[ ] The Israelites on Delos, who make oerings on hallowed Argarizein, crown with a gold crown Sarapion, son of Jason, of Knossos, for his benefactions toward them. [ ] The Israelites [on Delos], who make oerings to hallowed, consecrated Argarizein, honor Menippos son of Artemidoros, of Herakleion, both himself and his descendants, for having constructed and dedicated at their expense the proseuche of God . . . and they crowned him with a gold crown and [. . .].158
It is not clear whether these benefactors were fellow-Samaritans honored by their coreligionists on Delos or prominent pagans who had contributed to the local Samaritan community.159 In the rst inscription, the donation of Sarapion of Knossos is unspecied; in the latter, Menippos of Herakleion built the proseuche and perhaps other parts of the complex as well, though this part of the inscription is mutilated. If, indeed, these men were pagans, then the reason for their benefaction is unclear: Were they maintaining political or economic ties with the Samaritans? Or perhaps they had other kinds of bonds (familial?) with members of this community? The fact that pagans would contribute to synagogues is not, in and of itself, unusual. We have already come across one such example (e.g., Capernaum according to Luke 7:5), and others will follow below. Interestingly, the Samaritans, like numerous Diaspora Jewish communities, chose to honor those benefactors with crowns or wreaths as well as public inscriptions. No less important for our purposes is the mention of a Samaritan proseuche. This would
158. For interpretations of the proseuche of God, see Bruneau (for a vow Les Isralites de Dlos, 488) and White (to the proseucheDelos Synagogue Revisited, 14244). I have adopted Whites interpretation. These inscriptions were rst published in Bruneau, Les Isralites de Dlos, 46775. See also Kraabel, New Evidence, 33132; idem, Synagoga Caeca, 22024; White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 141 44; idem, Social Origins, 34042; Llewelyn, New Documents, VIII, 14851. Use of the name Israelites by the Delian Samaritans is undoubtedly part of the same phenomenon as the appearance of the name Jeroboam on coins from Samaria at about this time (Meshorer, Ancient Jewish Coinage, I, 3132, 160). In both instances, the implicit claim is that the Samaritans are the successors of the true Israel, i.e., the northern kingdom. For a Jewish polemic against the Samaritans contrasting the virtuous woman of Judah with the compromised daughters of Israel, see C. Moore, Daniel, Esther and Jeremiah: Additions, 114. 159. Bruneau prefers to consider them Samaritans; Kraabel leaves the question open, though he leans toward a Samaritan identication; White concludes that they were, in fact, pagans (Bruneau, Les Isralites de Dlos, 481; Kraabel, New Evidence, 334; and esp. idem, Synagoga Caeca, 22223; White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 142 n. 36, 144; and, for a more decisive view, idem, Building Gods House, 6667).
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seem to clinch the fact that the other Samaritan inscription refers to such a building as well. The fact that Samaritans lived in the vicinity may strengthen the likelihood that this residential area served Jews as well. In second-century Ptolemaic Egypt, both of these communities lived side by side and even shared the same charity funds.160 Whether these were two separate proseuchai (one Jewish and one Samaritan), one proseuche serving both communities at one and the same time, or a proseuche that served both communities in successive eras are all intriguingalbeit elusivepossibilities.161 The main reservation in identifying the Delos building as a synagoguebesides the absence of explicit evidenceis based on the lamps found there, some of which are decorated with pagan motifs. Of late, this evidence has been either ignored or dismissed. One might, indeed, argue that they were not found in situ and therefore may well have been deposited there at a later stage. Secondly, it was once assumed that Jews throughout antiquity were united in their opposition to gural representation. Over the past generation, however, this view has been dramatically modied by both the endless stream of archaeological nds and a more nuanced understanding of the literary sources. Jewish communities of Late Antiquity were far from monolithic in this regard, and there is no reason to assume that all Diaspora Jews in the late Hellenisticearly Roman periods were of one mind. Delos may very well reect a dierent cultural and artistic norm from that of Judaea or elsewhere in the Diaspora. Taken in conjunction with the statue bases from Egypt and the possible evidence from the synagogues of Berenice and Acmonia (see below), which included wall decorations, perhaps even depictions of animals and humans (not to mention the third-century c.e. Dura Europos synagogue), gural representations may have been quite acceptable, at least in some parts of the Diaspora.162 A signicant degree of hellenization within the local Jewish community is also attested by the language and prosopography evidenced in the above inscriptions. Like the Jews of Egypt and Cyrene, those of Delos used Greek exclusively (at least as far as our limited evidence indicates), and their Greek names likewise reect a hellenized cultural milieu. From Josephus we learn that many Delian Jews were also Roman citizens (see below).163 The building used by the Jews for communal purposes followed the pattern established by other Delian associations, whose premises often included a large porticoed courtyard and a lavish marble chair.164 The chair, similar to those reserved for priests in pagan tem-
160. Antiquities 13, 7479. 161. See Kant, Jewish Inscriptions, 7078 n. 9. 162. Lamps with pagan ornamentation were found in the Jewish catacombs of Rome; see Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 8588. 163. Antiquities 14, 23132. This phenomenon was so widespread that their exemption from military service became an issue for other Delians. 164. Mazur, Studies on Jewry, 1819. It should be noted that such models diered considerably in elaborateness, depending on the material circumstances of each group; see Bruneau, Recherches sur les cultes de Dlos; White, Building Gods House, 26.
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ples, may be our earliest evidence of the Seat [cathedra] of Moses, a special chair or bench found in a number of synagogues of Late Antiquity and mentioned in both the New Testament and rabbinic literature.165 Finally, some information regarding the Delos community generally, and its synagogue indirectly, has been preserved among the Roman decrees relating to a number of Diaspora communities and included by Josephus in his Antiquities. Pertinent to our present discussion is the following:
Julius Gaius, Praetor, Consul of the Romans, to the magistrates, council and people of Parium,166 greeting. The Jews in Delos and some of the neighboring Jews, some of your envoys also being present, have appealed to me and declared that you are preventing them by statute from observing their national customs and sacred rites. Now it displeases me that such statutes should be made against our friends and allies and that they should be forbidden to live in accordance with their customs and to contribute money to common meals and sacred rites, for this they are not forbidden to do even in Rome. For example, Gaius [Julius] Caesar, our consular praetor, by edict forbade religious societies to assemble in the city, but these people alone he did not forbid to do so or to collect contributions of money or to hold common meals. Similarly do I forbid other religious societies but permit these people alone to assemble and feast in accordance with their native customs and ordinances. And if you have made any statutes against our friends and allies, you will do well to revoke them because of their worthy deeds on our behalf and their goodwill toward us.167
The above document reveals a number of important matters. As noted, the Jews of Rome seem to have enjoyed extensive communal privileges; and Roman ocials expected this practice to be followed elsewhere as well.168 Secondly, the Delos Jewish community had apparently encountered considerable diculties with its neighbors. The Jews were forced to appeal to Rome because Delian authorities were perceived to be undermining Jewish communal life. Presumably, laws had been enacted to prevent the Jews from observing their traditions and collecting monies to nance activities such as common meals and sacred rites ( ). The severity of the matter is underscored by the simultaneous appearance in Rome of a counterdelegation that presented arguments against the Jews. In a second decree from about the same time, Delian ocials acknowledged (though not very happily, it seems) that Jews were to be exempt from military service by orders of a Roman ocial.169 Privileges of this sort could not but have had a souring eect on the
165. See below, Chap. 9. 166. On suggestions for the identication of this site, see comments by Marcus in Josephus, Antiquities, LCL, VII, 561 n. f. 167. Antiquities 14, 21316. Pucci Ben Zeev (Who Wrote a Letter? 23743; eadem, Jewish Rights, 10718, and especially 115) dates this decree to 43 (possibly 42) b.c.e., and claims that it was authored by Octavian. On the many issues involved with this document, see Gruen, Diaspora, 9293 and n. 52. 168. See above, notes 139 and 140. 169. Josephus, Antiquities 14, 23132: Decree of the Delians. In the archonship of Boeotus, on the
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relations between the Jews and their neighbors, with the latter, in turn, attempting to reduce (if not eliminate) the Jews preferred status. In light of these documents, the location of the Delian Jewish community in a relatively isolated part of the island takes on additional signicance. Not only could it have served Jewish interests to be somewhat isolated, but it may already reect (or have subsequently contributed to) a degree of social alienation, and perhaps even hostility, between the Jewish and pagan residents on the island.
Josephus
Josephus has preserved a series of Imperial edicts relating to the rst century b.c.e., each rearming the rights and privileges of various Jewish communities in Asia Minor in the face of local opposition and hostility.171 Each edict presumes that the Jews were
twentieth day of the month of Thargelion, response of the magistrates. The legate Marcus Piso, when resident in our city, having been placed in charge of the recruiting of soldiers, summoned us and a considerable number of citizens and ordered that if there were any Jews who were Roman citizens, no one should bother them about military service, inasmuch as the consul Lucius Cornelius Lentulus had exempted the Jews from military service in consideration of their religious scruples. You must therefore obey the magistrate. Similar to this was the decree that the people of Sardis passed. See Pucci Ben Zeev, Jewish Rights, 16872. 170. On the numerous Jewish communities in this area, see, inter alia, Philo, Embassy, 245, 281; M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 14355; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 536; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 13766; Lichtenberger, Organisationsformen, 2327. 171. Josephus, Antiquities 14, 21364; 16, 16073. On these edicts, see Schrer, History, III, 114.; Juster, Les Juifs, I, 391.; II, 127; La Piana, Foreign Groups, 34851; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 12043; Applebaum, Legal Status, 42063; Moehring, Acta pro Judaeis, 12458; Rajak, Was There a Roman Charter? 10723; eadem, Jewish Rights, 1935; Pucci Ben Zeev, Caesar and Jewish Law, 28 37; eadem, Jewish Rights, 3953; eadem, Jewish Rights, passim. These decrees stem from the basic recognition extended by Julius Caesar to the Jews in the Roman Empire, in no small part in gratitude for the support he received from Antipater, Hyrcanus II, and the Jews of Judaea in his struggle against Pompey ( Josephus, Antiquities 14, 21112). At the same time, these
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well organized, having formed their own communal framework, and possessed their own social and religious mores (see below). Undoubtedly, this also meant the presence of a place of worship, i.e., a proseuche or synagogue, although, admittedly, in only a few of these edicts is such a place specically mentioned. It is to this evidence that we now turn. Josephus records a decree regarding the Jews of Halicarnassus,172 in which it is carefully noted that the community was assured the inviolability of their holy days and gatherings: We have also decreed that those men and women who so wish may observe their Sabbaths and perform their sacred rights in accordance with the Jewish laws, and many built places of prayer [ proseuchai ] 173 near the sea, in accordance with their native custom. Of particular interest here is the explicit statement that many Jews built synagogues near bodies of water, a phenomenon we have already encountered in Egypt, Delos, and Ostia.174 A similar reference appears in Acts.175 The reason for this practice is not entirely clear, although one obvious possibility is the need to be close to water for purication purposes, a practice already attested in the Letter of Aristeas.176 There may also have been other reasons for this preference, e.g., the Jews desire to distance themselves from the pagan city generally in order to avoid, or at least reduce, tensions with their neighbors stemming from their dierent practices and behavior, or to allow for a less polluted worship environment, far from pagan places of idolatry.177 Josephus has preserved several decrees regarding Sardis that are likewise pertinent to our discussion. One document explicitly notes that the Jews had a place () where they decided their aairs, being organized, as they were, in an association () governed by ancestral laws.178 In another decree, the Jews were granted both the right to orgaprivileges also continued the earlier Hellenistic tradition of religious and ethnic tolerance with regard to the Jews. Josephus makes this claim in an exaggerated fashion on several occasions; see his Antiquities 12, 11920; 16, 16061; and below. 172. Antiquities 14, 258. 173. E. P. Sanders, Jewish Law, 259, 341 n. 26; Pucci Ben Zeev, Jewish Rights, 20616. 174. See above; see also Lauterbach, Tashlik, 207.; Goldin, Studies in Midrash, 346. 175. Acts 16:13. See also Philo, Flaccus 12223. 176. Letter of Aristeas 3046. The idea that the sea was valid for purication purposes is reected in the following: All seas are valid as a miqveh . . . so [says] R. Meir. R. Judah says: The Great Sea is valid as a miqveh. . . . R. Yosi says: All seas render clean by virtue of being owing waters (M Miqvaot 5, 4); and And it happened that Rabban Gamaliel and Onqelos the Proselyte would come to Ashkelon, and Rabban Gamaliel immersed himself in a bath and Onqelos the Proselyte in the sea. R. Joshua b. Qabusai said: I was with them and Rabban Gamaliel immersed himself in the sea (T Miqvaot 6, 3 [p. 658]). Regarding the waters of a river, see T Makhshirin 2, 12 (p. 674); T Miqvaot 4, 5 (p. 656). See also E. P. Sanders, Judaism, 22324; Pucci Ben Zeev, Jewish Rights, 21516. 177. See Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Bo, 1 (p. 2); and Sukenik, Ancient Synagogues, 49., where being near water is associated with the rabbinic concept of impurity of gentile lands. See also Alon, Jews, Judaism in the Classical World, 14689. 178. Antiquities 14, 235.
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nize their communal life, including self-adjudication, and a place () for the practice of their ancestral customs, which included prayer and sacrice.179 A general edict of Augustus to the Jews of Asia Minor from 12 b.c.e. is of especial importance: And if anyone is caught stealing sacred books or sacred monies from a Sabbath-house [] or a banquet hall [], he shall be regarded as sacrilegious, and his property shall be conscated to the public treasury of the Romans. 180 Many, if not most, of the synagogues had a banquet hall in addition to a place for Sabbath assembly. Sacred communal meals are documented in a number of rst-century Jewish contexts (Pharisaic avurot, Essenes [Qumran], Therapeutae, and the early church), mostly in connection with religious associations. However, it would appear that such communal meals were not foreign to the wider Jewish community, as reected in the decree regarding Delian Jews.181 Such banquet halls could have served other functions as well, and smaller facilities may have consisted of a single room utilized for several purposes. Finally, the reference to a synagogue as a repository for sacred books and sacred monies is invaluable. These monies were probably donated for local use as well as for the Jerusalem Temple, a practice that, as we have seen, was widespread among rst-century Diaspora communities.182
New Testament
As was the case with the Second Temple Judaean synagogue, the New Testament has preserved invaluable material relating to the Diaspora synagogue in Asia Minor and Greece. The account in Acts of Pauls journeys attests to the density of Jewish settlement and the development of Christianity throughout the eastern Mediterranean in general and in Asia Minor and Greece in particular. In all, Acts mentions the synagogue nineteen times, almost always referring to the institution as synagogue, with but one exception, Philippi, where the term proseuche is used. Acts informs us of synagogues in Damascus
179. Ibid., 260: they may, in accordance with their accepted custom, come together and have a communal life and adjudicate suits among themselves, and that a place be given them in which they may gather together with their wives and children and oer their ancestral prayers and sacrices to God. The reference to Jewish sacrices is enigmatic; see below, Chap. 5, note 33. 180. Josephus, Antiquities 16, 164. See M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 146. On a similar term in Syriac, , see Payne Smith, Thesaurus Syriacus, I, col. 497. There is also a reference to a sabbateion in an early second-century inscription from Thyatira in Asia Minor, where a synagogue is probably intended (Frey, CIJ, II, no. 752; van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 15051). For a reference to a house of the Sabbath in Rabbat Moab that was destroyed by Barsauma between 419 and 422 c.e., see Nau, Deux pisodes, 188. On the andron generally, see C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 4748. 181. See above, note 167. 182. Antiquities 14, 21316. Regarding the sending of money to Jerusalem by the Jews of Ephesus, see Philo, Embassy 315. On the Jerusalem church and contributions from various diaspora churches, see, inter alia, Rom. 15:2526; I Cor. 16:14; Meeks, First Urban Christians, 110.
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(9:2, 20), Salamis (13:5), Antioch of Pisidia (13:14), Iconium (14:1), Thessalonica (17:1), Berea (17:10), Athens (17:17), Corinth (18:7, 8), Ephesus (18:19.), and Philippi (16:13). The frequent reference to synagogues in Acts is not fortuitous. According to Luke (author of Acts), this institution was a critical factor in the spread of Christianity in its early stages. Almost every reference to a synagogue is related to Pauls missionary activity;183 at rst he addresses the Jews and only later the gentiles. The pattern appearing in Acts is almost inexorable: visit to a synagogue, eective preaching, Jewish hostility, and expulsion.184 This recurrent phenomenon goes to the heart of Acts theological and political message. Paul is rebued time and again by the Jews, and only then devotes himself fully and unequivocally to the gentile mission. The theological basis of this schema is clearly spelled out in Acts 13:46: And Paul and Barnabas spoke out boldly, saying, It was necessary that the word of God should be spoken rst to you. Since you thrust it from yourselves, thereby judging yourselves unworthy of eternal life, behold, we turn to the gentiles. 185 Much has been written about the historical reliability of Actsfrom the more skeptical to the largely accepting. Theological agendas aside, one may assume that the specic events reported, especially those relating to the synagogue, are largely credible. The author was certainly familiar with the Jewish Diaspora and wrote for Christian Diaspora communities. It is hard to imagine that he would invent accounts for a population that knew a great deal about the synagogue, its workings, and Pauls activities. At the very least, even were one to doubt the specic details included in Acts, one would have to admit that such events could well have taken place, even if not precisely in the manner recorded. Many interesting and important details regarding the synagogue emerge from the accounts in Acts. For instance, the antiquity of the custom of reading Scriptures in the synagogue on the Sabbath is considered here, as in other sources, to derive from Moses himself (Acts 15:21). In fact, it is Sabbath worship that regularly provides the setting for Pauls encounters with the local community (e.g., Acts 13:42; 16:13; 17:2; 18:4). Clearly, the Sabbath was the primary occasion for the community to congregate, particularly in a worship context.186 As noted, this phenomenon may be alluded to in two Berenice inscrip183. The one exception is the reference to an Alexandrian Jew named Apollos, who spoke in the synagogue of Ephesus (Acts 18:26). 184. So, for example, Acts 9:2022; 13:4448; 14:16; 14:19; 17:19, 16.; 18:1821. 185. See also Kee, Jews in Acts, 18395. Despite a rather skeptical approach to the historical validity of many New Testament traditions concerning the synagogue, McKay (Sabbath and Synagogue, 16571) seems to accept most of Acts accounts as reliably reecting the synagogues that Luke knew. See also A. F. Segal, Paul, 26773. 186. Regarding the Christians of Berea, Acts notes that some Jews would gather daily to study Scriptures, particularly in response to Pauls message. Clearly, the intent here is to describe an emerging Christian community whose fervor and commitment led to daily study, reminiscent of the practice among
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tions, where the regular (as opposed to monthly) gathering seems to refer to the Sabbath, as well as in Josephus reference to the of Asia Minor Jewry.187 While most cities appear to have had one synagogue, the plural synagogues is used on several occasions, probably reecting a large local Jewish population that required more than one building.188 The only synagogue ocial specically named in these accounts is the archisynagogos. In one instance, this ocial invited Paul to speak to the congregation in Antioch of Pisidia following the reading of the Torah and Prophets; clearly the position entailed a degree of responsibility and authority.189 In a second instance, Acts notes that Crispus, the archisynagogue of the Corinthian synagogue, became a believer (18:8), and it is not surprising that his whole household followed suit. However, the fact that immediately afterwards many other Corinthians, having heard Paul, began to believe in Jesus and were then baptized may attest to the impact of Crispus conversion on his fellow-citizens and thus to his prominence in the community generally. Two synagogue scenes described in Acts are especially noteworthy. One (16:1213) has to do with Pauls rst encounter with the Jews of Philippi in Macedonia. He came to the city in midweek and waited several days for the Sabbath and his rst encounter with the local Jewish community. He then went to the riverside, where we supposed there was a place of prayer [ proseuche], 190 and there met a group of women. The presence of women, some of high standing, in Pauls audience at Berea is also noted.191 Acts singles out gentiles, both men and women, as also having frequented Diaspora synagogues.192 The attraction of many pagans to Judaism in antiquity is well documented.193 Although the nature of this missionary phenomenon has been vigorously debated of late, the issues in dispute concern its extent in the rst century and the degree of active missionizing on the part of the Jews.194 What is to be noted in the present convarious sects such as the Essenes, Therapeutae, and, undoubtedly, the Pharisees. The author of Acts describes these Jews as more noble than those of nearby Thessalonica (Acts 17:11). 187. Antiquities 16, 164. 188. Acts 9:2, 20; 13:5. 189. Ibid., 13:15. See Chap. 5. 190. Alternatively: where prayer was carried out. 191. Acts 17:12. The special attraction of women to Judaism is attested elsewhere as well (e.g., War 2, 560); see below, Chap. 14. 192. So, for example, Acts 13:43; 14:12; 17:4, 12; 18:4; as well as Josephus, War 7, 45. See also ibid., 2, 463; idem, Against Apion 2, 123; and Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 14566, esp. 16466. 193. So, for example, Josephus, Antiquities 14, 110; see Schrer, History, III, 15076; Juster, Les Juifs, I, 253337; M. Stern, Sympathy for the Jews, 15567 (= Studies, 50517); Feldman, Proselytes and Sympathizers, 265305; idem, Jew and Gentile, 177445; McKnight, Light among the Gentiles; Figueras, Epigraphic Evidence, 194206. 194. See, for example, S. J. D. Cohen, Was Judaism in Antiquity a Missionary Religion? 1423 (cf. Feldmans very dierent emphasis in the same volume, Was Judaism a Missionary Religion in Ancient
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text is the central role played by the synagogue in this regard. It was not only the place where Judaism was most visible, thus drawing the sympathetic and curious, but, once they were won over, it became a focus of identication and aliation. These gentiles, of many stripes and referred to by dierent names, may have played a prominent role in some Diaspora synagogues (see below, Bosphorus), and this appears to have been the case in Late Antiquity as well.195 In fact, the status enjoyed by many Diaspora communities may have been due, at least in part, to the presence and support of a large number of pagan sympathizers. The second account of importance described in Acts (13:15) oers us a eeting glimpse at the Sabbath-morning liturgy in the Antioch of Pisidia synagogue. Four elements are featured in this schema: a selection from the Torah is recited; then a selection from the Prophets is read; the archisynagogue invites Paul to speak; and Paul addresses the congregation. This order of events generally parallels Lukes earlier description of the synagogue service at Nazareth.196 Perhaps the remarkable fact in this account is the receptivity of the local community to the participation of outsiders. Pauls appearance in Antioch was unannounced; he was, for all intents and purposes, a stranger. Nevertheless, he was asked to address the congregation. How widespread this custom was is impossible to assess, although we may note that something similar happened at Ephesus. According to Acts 18:2426, an Alexandrian Jew named Apollos came to the local synagogue there and spoke eectively and fervently about Jesus from a distinctively non-Pauline perspective. Once again, the synagogue served as an open forum for Jews of dierent backgrounds and persuasions.
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hundred, the inscriptions relating to the synagogue or its ocials comprise almost half this number. Most are dedicatory inscriptions from synagogue buildings; a few are epitaphs that mention a synagogue aliation. Although practically all these inscriptions date from Late Antiquity, one of the most important among them comes from rst-century c.e. Acmonia. Located inland in Phrygia, this city has an importance in large measure due to its strategic position on the Persian Royal Road. The inscription reads as follows:
The edice was constructed by Julia Severa. Publius Tyrronios Clados, archisynagogos for life, Lucius son of Lucius, archisynagogos, and Popilios Zoticos, archon, have renovated [the building] from their own funds and from the community treasury. They decorated the walls and the ceiling, and they made the windows secure and [made] all the rest of the decoration. The synagogue honors these individuals with a gold shield on account of their excellent leadership and their kindly feelings toward and zeal for the congregation.197
The items of interest here are manifold. Most striking, of course, is the fact that the synagogue building itself was built by one Julia Severa a number of years prior to the date of this inscription, which itself deals with the restoration of the structure. Even more unusual than the nature of this womans benefaction is the fact that she was a well-known pagan who came from a nexus of leading families. The local coinage celebrates Julia Severa as politically active in the mid-rst century, holding the positions of agonothete and (high priestess) of the local Imperial cult.198 Pagan donations to synagogues are known elsewhere in Asia Minor as well, but donating an entire building was indeed
197. The translation of this inscription has been adapted from White, Social Origins, 30810, and Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 5859. See also Frey, CIJ, II, no. 766 (= MAMA, VI, no. 264); Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 33. A major issue here is whether Julia Severa donated a building to the Jews for use as a synagogue or simply built an edice that later was transferred to, or bought by, the Jewish community. The term (lit., house or building) has been used in both ways (see the Phocaea and Stobi inscriptions in White, Social Origins, nos. 68, 73). From the inscription here, it seems most likely that a synagogue building was intended. Why else should the fact that Julia erected a building be mentioned at all in this context? If one assumes that the building was originally earmarked for some other purpose, and only later was given or sold to the Jews, why is this fact not noted at all? It seems very plausible that the edice had been intended from the outset as a gift of a synagogue to the Jewish community and only later was renovated by the three named leaders. See the comments of Rajak, Synagogue within the Greco-Roman City, 16173, as well as Matthews, Ladies Aid, 199218; Walton, Oriental Senators in the Service of Rome, 4445. 198. Levick, Roman Colonies, 107. Julias husband, Lucius Servenius Capito, was a decurion in Acmonia in the time of Nero, and her son, L. Servenius Cornutus, held many oceshe was, for example, a senator under Nero and a legatus to the proconsul of Asia. For the numismatic evidence, see Ramsay, Cities and Bishoprics, 63839; see also Schrer, History, III, 31. On the positions Julia held in the Imperial cult, see Ramsay, Cities and Bishoprics, 639; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 59.
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rare.199 It was once suggested that Julia was, in fact, a Jewess; however, this claim has been controverted by her now well-documented pagan aliations.200 Some timeperhaps several decades after the initial contribution by Juliarepairs of the synagogue were undertaken by three leading ocials, two archisynagogoi and one archon.201 How the archon Popilios Zoticos was related to the synagogue is unknown. The two archisynagogoi, bearing Greek and Latin names, may not have held identical positions. One was head for life ( ); whether this was a purely honorary title following years of service or, indeed, a reection of a continuous term of oce is dicult to determine. The second one, Lucius, is simply noted as an archisynagogos. Whether his father, of the same name, also held this position is unknown; it will be remembered that retaining such an oce for generations within a single family is attested in the Theodotos inscription from rst-century Jerusalem.202 The funds used for restoration of the building appear to have been matching grants (whatever the relative percentages) from these three leaders and the community at large. The wall and ceiling paintings are noteworthy, though the nature of these paintings geometrical, oral, or gural motifsis unknown. Depending on the lavishness of the ornamentation, this synagogue may have been similar to those in contemporary Berenice, or Sardis and Dura Europos later on. The three major donors were honored in ways typical among Greek and Roman donors generally. Not only did they merit the above inscription, but they were awarded a gold shield.203
199. See below, Chap. 8. A parallel phenomenon from the fourth century may be the building of a proseuche by the Imperial governor in Panticapaeum (Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 229 31). It is interesting to note that relations between the Jews and their neighbors in this region appear to have been particularly close; see Sheppard, Jews, Christians and Heretics, 16980; Crawford, Multiculturalism at Sardis, 3847. On this phenomenon generally, see M. Stern, Sympathy for the Jews, 15567 (= Studies, 50517). 200. See, for example, White, Social Origins, 3089; Ramsay, Cities and Bishoprics, 64851, 67375; and the somewhat ambiguous note in Juster, Juifs, I, 43031. On the opposite phenomenon, namely, Jews contributing to pagan shrines, see the examples cited in Barclay, Jews in the Mediterranean Diaspora, 32122. 201. A similar synagogue inscription, of undetermined date, was found in Olbia, along the shores of the Black Sea. It, too, speaks of synagogue ocials restoring the building: The society under the presidency of [? . . .] Pourthaios Achilleus son of Demetrius, Dionysodoros son of Eros [?], Zobeis son of Zobeis, the archons, have restored by their own care the synagogue from the foundations till . . . and have roofed it. See the translation and comments of Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 64; idem, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 11; Frey, CIJ, I, no. 682. 202. See above, Chap. 3. White (Social Origins, 30910 n. 48) has speculated that the synagogue ocials named Tyrronios and Lucius were Jewish freedmen (or their descendants) in the service of Julia Severa, and this would therefore explain her involvement with the Jewish community. 203. See Robert, Inscriptions grecques de Sid, 41 n. 1. On the phenomenon of such dedications in Asia Minor and some of their social and political implications, see Rogers, Gift and Society, 18899.
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itly mentioned on eight occasions, and it would seem that this procedure was regularly carried out there;208 in ve instances, the synagogue (here the term refers to the congregation) was appointed guardian.209 These inscriptions are unique not only because the ceremony took place within the proseuche, but also because the congregation per se was involved in the legal proceedings and the freed slave was committed to serving it in some capacity (see below). To date, three inscriptions, from 41, 59, and 67 c.e., have been discovered in Gorgippia (modern Anape). The rst of these translates as follows:
To the Most High God, Almighty, blessed, in the reign of the king Mithridates, the friend of [?] and the friend of the fatherland, in the year 338 [= 41 c.e.], in the month Deios, Pothos, the son of Strabo, dedicated to the proseuche, in accordance with the vow, his female slave [],210 whose name is Chrusa, on condition that she should be unharmed and unmolested by any of his heirs under Zeus, Ge, Helios.211
Noteworthy, in the rst place, is the threefold invocation of God in typical Jewish form ( ).212 The Greek names of the Jews, both father and son, should not surprise us, for elsewhere in the Diaspora, as we have seen, Jews, as a matter of course, adopted the nomenclature regnant in their surroundings.213 The fact that this and similar manumission ceremonies were performed in the synagogue is indeed unusual. Clearly, this was an act with religious as well as social implications, as the manumission formula itself attests. At rst there was some skepticism about the Jewishness of this text owing to the pagan formula summoning Jupiter, the earth, and the sun to witness the transaction.214 Such
208. Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 12452. Several other inscriptions do not specically note a proseuche (or Jews), but they may well refer to a Jewish context (ibid., 1972). 209. These inscriptions are to be found in one or more of the following collections: Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 683, 684, 690; Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 6569; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 23142; and especially Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 12452, 15967. Following Gibsons presentation (ibid., 11213), we should probably also include two other inscriptions (CIRB 1125, 1126); see ibid., 124. For a manumission document from Roman Egypt in 291 c.e., see Tcherikover et al., CPJ, III, no. 473. In this case, Jewish slaves were freed and the Jewish community (the synagogue of the Jews) paid their ransom. See also Harrill, Manumission of Slaves, 17278. On the manumission of Jewish slaves at Delphi, see Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 70911; on the manumission of slaves in Roman Italy, see Dyson, Community and Society, 199203. With regard to Delphi, see Hopkins, Conquerors and Slaves, 13371. 210. See A. Cameron, and Related Terms, 2753. 211. CIRB 1123 in Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 99100. See also Frey, CIJ, I, no. 690, with some minor variations; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 23940; Overman, Jews, Slaves, and the Synagogue, 14951; and comments there of Edwards, Jews and Christians, 16366. On the term Highest God, see Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 10923. 212. See also Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 116, and comments, p. 200. 213. Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 68. 214. Westermann, Slave Systems, 12426; Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 1057, 11921.
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usage should not be overly surprising, as similar formulas appear frequently in Bosphoran documents (and in other Jewish ones as wellsee below) and undoubtedly had become so common that they had lost all overtly pagan connotations.215 Moreover, in many other instances, from fth-century b.c.e. Elephantine through Josephus writings and down to third-century c.e. Bet Shearim and Hungary, we nd Jews utilizing formulas with distinctly pagan elements.216 Three other inscriptions from the rst and early second centuries come from the area surrounding the ancient city of Panticapaeum (near modern-day Kerch).217 While similar in many ways to the inscriptions from Gorgippia (i.e., with a manumission ceremony in the synagogue and a promise that the slave will not be reclaimed), they nevertheless display several unique features. To cite one example: I release in the proseuche, Elpias the son [?] of my slave, bred in my house; he shall remain undisturbed and unassailed by any of my heirs, except for [his duty] to serve the proseuche regularly; the community [synagoge] of the Jews and the God-fearers [?] will be guardian [of the enfranchised]. 218 We note here use of both proseuche and synagoge; the rst clearly refers to the building, as in other inscriptions from the region, the latter to the community. Unique to these Panticapaeum inscriptions are two stipulations: that the emancipated slave is to frequent the synagogue in the future and that the synagogue (i.e., the community) is to assume responsibility as a guardian () for the act of manumission. All of these elements appear in each of the Panticapaeum inscriptions, as well as in a more fragmentary one from Phanagoria, dating, perhaps, to 16 c.e. 219
215. Nock, Conversion, 63; Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 214; Minns, Scythians and Greeks, 516, 616; Lifshitz, Jewish History in the Bosphorean Kingdom, 130; MacLennan, In Search of the Jewish Diaspora, 48; M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 156. 216. Schrer, History, III, 37; Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 214; Schwabe and Lifshitz, Beth Shearim, II, no. 127; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 222; Scheiber, Jewish Inscriptions, 37. 217. Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 683, 684; Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 6566; MacLennan, In Search of the Jewish Diaspora, 4447. 218. CIRB 71; Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 66; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 15556; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 7481; and especially Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 14044. Scholars have long debated the precise nature of the obligation of the freed slave to the community: Was it a religious duty (to attend services regularly or to convert), an economic obligation (to perform services for the institution), or a commitment of service (to be involved or maintain some sort of identication with it)? See Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 13750; Overman, Jews, Slaves, and the Synagogue, 15051; and Gruen, Diaspora, 3012 n. 33. On the status of the community in these legal proceedings, see Overman, Jews, Slaves, and the Synagogue, 15157. 219. Another Panticapaeum inscription, dating to 80 c.e., reads as follows: During the reign of King Tiberius Julius Rhescuporius, pious friend of Caesar and friend of the Romans, in the 377th year the 12th of Peretou, I Chreste, formerly wife of Drusus, release in the proseuche my slave Heraclas, a free person once and for all according to my vow; he shall remain untouched and undisturbed by any heir, as I have vowed. He may go where he wants without restraint except that he must adhere devoutly [Gibson, 160:
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Of interest here as well is the possible reference to a group of God-fearers ( ) mentioned together with the Jews. If this reading is correct, it would indicate that God-fearers held a legally recognized position in the synagogue alongside the regular Jewish community, a presence even more institutionalized then than later on, in Late Antique Aphrodisias.220 Such a situation has far-reaching implications regarding these God-fearers numbers as well as their social and political standing.221
SYRIA
Despite its large size and relatively long history, the Jewish community of Syria generally, and of Antioch in particular, is only very partially known.222 Ironically, of all the Diaspora communities, this one oers us some important literary data from Late Antiquity (Chrysostom, Malalas, and several rabbinic traditionssee below, Chap. 8); for the pre-70 period, however, we must rely almost exclusively on Josephus and several traditions preserved by the sixth-century chronicler Malalas.223 Antioch and its kings played a central role in the Jewish aairs of Judaea during its Seleucid period, particularly in the
except for submissiveness and service] to the proseuche [see previous footnoteL.L.]. This agreement is made by my heirs Heraclides and Heliconias, and under the joint guardianship of the community of the Jews. See Frey, CIJ, I, no. 683; Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 160, as well as Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 23132. On the fragmentary inscription from Phanagoria, see Frey, CIJ, I, no. 691; Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 69; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 23637, where there is a slightly dierent rendition. Lifshitz, following Nadel, has suggested that these emancipated slaves may have been obligated to work (in the elds?) for the synagogues (Jewish History in the Bosphorean Kingdom, 128). 220. See Bellen, , 17176, as well as Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 66. See also Figueras, Epigraphic Evidence, 2023. Note the Miletus inscription, which arguably may be read: A place for Jews and God-fearers (Frey, CIJ, II, no. 748); see below, Chap. 8. 221. Levinskaya (Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 7476) rejects this reading and suggests the following toward the end of the inscription: that he (the freed slave) works for the prayer-house under the guardianship of the Jewish community, and honours God. She thus assumes that there is no reference here to a class of God-fearers, although she herself accepts the fact that they existed in large numbers in the Bosphorus Kingdom at the time (ibid., 11316). Most scholars, however, have accepted the suggested reading. See, for example, Schrer, History, III, 16668; Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 5456; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 15556; and especially Overman, Jew, Slaves, and the Synagogue, 15556; Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 14044. 222. Perhaps the size and importance of this community inuenced Herods generous contribution to the city; see Josephus, War 1, 328, 425. 223. On Jews of Antioch in this period, see S. Krauss, Antioche, 2749; Kraeling, Jewish Community at Antioch, 13060; Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 213; M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 137 42; Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 12735. On Jewish-Christian relations in rst-century Antioch, see Hahn, Judaism and Jewish Christianity, 34166. See also Downey, History of Antioch.
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century following Jasons Hellenistic reforms in Jerusalem (ca. 17575 b.c.e.),224 and it is in this context that some information is forthcoming. Josephus writes the following: For, although Antiochus surnamed Epiphanes sacked Jerusalem and plundered the Temple, his successors to the throne restored to the Jews of Antioch all such votive oerings as were made of brass, to be laid up in their synagogue, and, moreover, granted them citizen rights on an equal footing with the Greeks. Continuing to receive similar treatment from later monarchs, the Jewish colony grew in numbers, and their richly designed and costly oerings formed a splendid ornament to the holy place [ ]. Moreover, they were constantly attracting to their religious ceremonies multitudes of Greeks, and these they had in some measure incorporated with themselves. 225 Given Josephus claim that Jews lived in Antioch from its very foundation under Seleucus I or, at the latest, from the reign of Antiochus III,226 the existence of a synagogue in this community at an early date is more than likely. In the above source, Josephus claims that one of Antiochus IVs successors gave the citys synagogue all the brass ornaments and gifts that had been plundered from the Jerusalem Temple. If this is true, then this must have occurred between 163 and 65 b.c.e., i.e., after the death of Antiochus IV and prior to the Roman conquest of Syria by Pompey.227 If Josephus is correct that later Seleucid kings showered further benefactions on the Jews and their synagogue, then the original gifts must have been granted early on in this period, probably in the mid-second century, under Alexander Balas or Demetrius, when relations with the Jews of Judaea had improved considerably. The above source is also noteworthy in what it tells us about the centrality and prominence of this synagogue; for whatever reason, when a Seleucid king wished to restore the Temple treasures to the Jewish people, he turned to the Antioch synagogue, and not to Jerusalem itself. Thus, the term undoubtedly refers to the local synagogue and not, as is sometimes assumed, to the Jerusalem Temple. As a result of these gifts, and perhaps also the local communitys contributions, the Antioch synagogue became quite ornate and lavish, perhaps rivaling that of Alexandria as described by Philo and the Tosefta (see above). As in Asia Minor and Greece, Greeks in Syria were drawn to Judaism in signicant numbers. After describing the grandeur of the local synagogue, Josephus notes the at224. See, for example, II Macc. 4, 4.; I Macc. 11, 4244; Josephus, Antiquities 13, 377., 387. 225. War 7, 4445. On the tension between the Syrian pagan and Jewish populations throughout this period, see Roth-Gerson, Anti-Semitism in Syria, 30121. 226. Antiquities 12, 119; Against Apion 2, 39 (Seleucus I). Cf., however, Josephus statement in War 7, 4445 (Antiochus IV). See also Kraeling, Jewish Community at Antioch, 13839. 227. See, however, comments by Downey (History of Antioch, 109), who has doubts regarding the reliability of this report.
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traction of Jewish religious ceremonies for Antiochan gentiles. He seems to allude to the fact that many of these Greeks identied with Judaism, but either they had not fully committed themselves to the religion or the Jews had not fully accepted them: the Jews had in some measure incorporated [these Greeks] with themselves. 228 Malalas reports the existence of a tomb of the Maccabean martyrs in Antioch;229 a medieval source (Nissim ibn Shahin of Qairuon) notes the existence of a ashmunit synagogue in the city that was later converted into a church.230 The synagogue was allegedly named after the mother of the Maccabean martyrs.231 Finally, Malalas reports that, during the rst Jewish revolt, Vespasian had destroyed a synagogue at Daphne and replaced it with a theater: He built the theater of Daphne, inscribing on it, ex praeda Iudaea (from the spoils of Judaea). The site of the theater had formerly been a Jewish synagogue. 232 The report, at rst blush, appears strange indeed. Interestingly, Malalas reports a similar instance in Caesarea: Vespasian also built in Caesarea in Palestine out of the spoils from Judaea a very large odeum, the size of a large theater; its site, too, had formerly been that of a Jewish synagogue. 233 Might we have in these two reports evidence for Roman practice in several places following their successful resolution of the Jewish revolt of 66? We have additional information regarding Syrian synagogues from Damascus. Acts (9:12) speaks of the existence of a budding Christian community within the citys synagogues. Paul was incensed by what he considered a perversion and gained permission to bring these Christians to Jerusalem. Following his conversion, he preached in these very synagogues (9:2023). Moreover, the synagogues of Damascus, as in Antioch and elsewhere, were known for attracting pagan sympathizers and converts. Of especial noteworthiness in Josephus account is the fact that women were singled out as being particularly prominent among these Damascan pagans.234
228. War 7, 45. For a strikingly similar phenomenon in Antioch several centuries later, in the time of John Chrysostom, see below, Chap. 8. 229. Malalas, Chronicle 8, 2067 (pp. 1089). According to Malalas, Antiochus IV brought the Maccabean remains to Antioch, and a few years later Judah Maccabee (sic) requested and received the bones from Demetrius; he then proceeded to bury them near a synagogue in the Kerateion section of Antioch. See Obermann, Sepulchre of Maccabean Martyrs, 25065; Bickerman, Les Maccabes de Malalas, 6383; Simon, Recherches, 14753; Downey, History of Antioch, 11011. The source for the tradition of the Maccabean martyrs is II Macc. 6:187:42. See also Schatkin, Maccabean Martyrs, 97113. 230. Kraeling, Jewish Community at Antioch, 140; Downey, History of Antioch, 544; Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, 24750. For a Samaritan tradition describing a synagogue built over the tomb of Baba Rabba in Constantinople, see Chronicle II, 25, 16 (p. 109). 231. See Nau, Un Martyrologe, 19, 52, 106, 123, 131 (PO 10.1). 232. Malalas, Chronicle 10, 261 (p. 138); Downey, History of Antioch, 2067. See also Malalas report (Chronicle 10) that Titus had erected a gate of cherubs in Antioch from the spoils of the Jerusalem Temple. 233. Malalas, Chronicle 10, 261 (p. 138). See also L. Levine, Roman Caesarea, 2526. 234. War 2, 560. As often happened, widespread attraction was matched by extensive hostility. This,
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a network of customs and ceremonies, and bolstered by a set of beliefs that at times contrasted sharply with those of their neighbors.236 The Diaspora synagogue paralleled the contemporary Judaean one in its myriad functions while, at the same time, sharing many characteristics of non-Jewish institutions as well. It served the multiple purposes that a religious and ethnic minority such as the Jews would have neededreligious, educational, social, political, and economic. Nevertheless, although linked by a distinct (though not always easily dened) religious and ethnic heritage, these Diaspora communities reected a striking degree of diversity. The synagogues various names may indeed reect diverse perceptions of just what this institution was and how it was to function within the community. The most widespread terms, proseuche and synagoge, have been noted and may well point to varying emphases in each, at least in their formative stages.237 However, as we have already had occasion to note, other terms were being used in the rst century: (holy place), (place of prayer), (Sabbath meeting-place), and (place of instruction).238 More unusual terms, such as amphitheater and templum, were also invoked, as was the word .239 The synagogues of Romesome early, others lateare of a unique order, having been named after famous people, professions, or places of origin.240 A striking example of the unity and diversity among these synagogues may be found in even the small amount of archaeological evidence hailing from this period, i.e., the buildings of Delos and Ostia. On the one hand, both structures were close to the sea, far from the city center; both were oriented (in some fashion) toward Jerusalem and exhibited certain similarities to other structures in the vicinity. On the other hand, each had it own unique stamp, both vis--vis one another and with regard to their surroundings. The Ostia synagogue plan, for example, is far dierent from that of Delos. Moreover, the types of inscriptions and artistic representations found at Delos are not found at Ostia. Delian inscriptions feature the term theos hypsistos and have blatantly pagan symbols on the lamps, whereas an Ostia inscription notes the welfare of the emperor, and the artistic
236. Gafni, Punishment, Blessing or Mission, 22950. 237. L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 1314. The situation may be somewhat analogous to the contemporary American Jewish scene, where a synagogue might be called a temple, synagogue, shul, or community center. While to most Jews there may be little or no dierence between these various names, they can reect very dierent ideological and functional notions about the institution in the eyes of the founders and those it served in subsequent stages. 238. : Josephus, War 7, 4445; III Macc. 2:28. : Tcherikover et al., CPJ, II, 223. : Josephus, Antiquities 16, 164; Tcherikover et al., CPJ, III, 46. See also S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 2627; and above, note 180. : Philo, Special Laws 2, 62. 239. Amphitheater: see above, notes 10815. Templum: Tacitus, Hist. 5, 5, 4; see M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 43. : see above, note 225, as well as later examples; cf. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 13, 21, 22, 61. 240. Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 13566.
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expression there is almost nonexistent. Finally, of course, the names used in connection with these two buildingsproseuche and synagogueare quite dierent.241 One of the major reasons for this pronounced diversity stems from the fact that the Jews who established these early Diaspora communities had no set models of what a community center facility should look like. Furthermore, in the Diaspora, powerful forces impacted upon each community, resulting in numerous instances of adopting patterns of the wider culture. Years ago, Kraabel called attention to this phenomenon, and with the passage of time and new discoveries and studies, this perception has only been strengthened.242 The names used by members of the community often imitate those generally popular on the local scene. Julia Severas contribution of a synagogue building seems to reect a patronage unique to this part of Asia Minor; the organization and functioning of the Jewish politeuma in Berenice may well have derived, in part at least, from Cyrenian models;243 the type of building used by Delian Jews bore similarities with other buildings on that island; and the manumission decrees from Bosphorus, with their formulary components, are well known in that particular region. Studies focusing on the Egyptian synagogue further conrm this perception, highlighting the many links between the Jewish proseuche on the one hand and the surrounding Greco-Egyptian culture on the other. Such parallels include dedications on behalf of the ruling family, the proseuches status as a place of asylum, the names and functions of synagogue ocials, and various architectural components. Signicant local inuence points to another characteristic of these Diaspora synagoguesnamely, a high degree of hellenization. Diaspora synagogues employed Greek terms for their institutions and ocers, and they often referred to the God of Israel as the Greeks did to Zeus (i.e., theos hypsistos). They almost always wrote in Greek, bore Greek and, at times, Latin names, honored fellow-Jews and benevolent pagans with crowns, shields, woolen llets, and inscriptions, and built and decorated their buildings in ways customary in Hellenistic-Roman society. This assimilation of outside patterns came quite naturally, nurtured as it was within a heterogeneous society.244 Throughout the course of Jewish history, the more diverse and pluralistic a society, the greater its acceptance of the Jewish community within it. The Roman Empire provided such a multicultural setting,
241. That dierent Diaspora communities may have had dierent calendars, see S. Stern, Jewish Calendar Reckoning, 10716. 242. Kraabel, Diaspora Jews and Judaism, 25767 (= Social Systems, 7991). See also Price, Jewish Diaspora, 17677. More recently, White has carried this argument even further, suggesting that almost every Diaspora synagogue was a private home converted into a communal institution; see his Building Gods House, 6061, 64, 78; and esp. his Delos Synagogue Revisited, 13536. 243. See Lderitz, What Is the Politeuma? 21922. 244. On the multicultural, social, and religious heterogeneity of Ptolemaic Egypt, see, for example, Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria; Walbank, Hellenistic World, 99102; Samuel, From Athens to Alexandria, 10517.
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as did Ptolemaic Egypt throughout much of the Hellenistic period. In the latter, as we have seen, the Jews dedicated building after building in honor of the reigning king and queen, as did their neighbors. Besides borrowing specic practices and architectural elements, some scholars have suggested far more profound connections between the synagogue and the Greco-Roman world. According to them, the Jews patterned the synagogue and its activities on outside models, the one most frequently mentioned in this regard being the Hellenistic-Roman private association. These associations ranged from the more ocially recognized politeuma and collegium to less-dened groupings (synodos, koinon, thiasos, communitas) that might have been based on common geographical origins, commercial interests, religious aliation, mutual aid, or dining and burial needs.245 The subject of Greco-Roman models inuencing the synagogue has been addressed of late in a collection of studies, Voluntary Associations in the Graeco-Roman World, and particularly in an article by Richardson.246 His claim, that the synagogue was dened as a collegium, is based on two considerations: (1) the use of the term in Roman documents referring to the Jewish community; (2) the fact that the synagogue functioned as a social and religious association, as did the collegium. Regarding his rst point, we might ask whether the use of this terminology by the Romans with reference to the synagogue was merely a question of convenience, whereby the Roman authorities merely used a term familiar to them without attempting to be exact and precise.247 In other words, did the term collegium actually reect the legal status of the synagogue? And, if so, did it apply to all synagogues throughout the Mediterranean or did the use of several dierent terms, as noted above, reect alternative models? Nevertheless, it must be remembered that the synagogue diered from the above Greco-Roman frameworks in many and signicant ways.248 The Jewish community operated with a far greater range of activities and rights than the ordinary collegium, and the Romans were far more tolerant of the Jewish communal framework than of others; to wit, collegia were often banned by the authorities while the Jewish community remained unaected.249 The Jews had the right to maintain their own courts, attend to their own food requirements, avoid worshipping the civic deities or appearing in court on Sabbaths
245. See Schrer, History, III, 87137; Waltzing, tude historique, passim; Juster, Les Juifs, I, 41324; La Piana, Foreign Groups, 34851; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 13338; Kraabel, Diaspora Jews and Judaism, 2326 (= Unity and Diversity, 5154); Meeks, First Urban Christians, 3436; Rabello, Legal Condition, 71920; Rajak, Was There a Roman Charter? 10723. 246. Richardson, Early Synagogues as Collegia, 90109; idem, Architectural Case, 90117. See also Guterman, Religious Toleration and Persecution, 13056. 247. As, for example, in noting the right of the Jews to oer sacrices in an edict to the Jewish community of SardisJosephus, Antiquities 14, 261. 248. See Gruen, Diaspora, 12123. 249. Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 22430.
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and festivals; they were exempt from serving in the army, sent monies to Jerusalem, and conducted a wide range of communal aairs. In certain places, the Jewish community was recognized as a politeuma, a civic framework attested in Alexandria and Berenice. Most of the above rights and privileges were not applicable to contemporary collegia or thiasoi. Thus, the term collegia with regard to the synagogue seems to have been one of Roman convenience and not in any way reective of a specic legal framework. Certainly, the Jews never viewed their synagogue or community in this light, and this term never appears in any document or inscription ascribed to Jews.250 Flesher takes a very dierent approach in his search for Greco-Roman models of the synagogue, classifying the institution as a type of Greco-Roman temple:
The research discussed in this paper reveals that the Graeco-Romans saw the synagogue as belonging to the genus of temple, even though it was not a perfect t. This should not be surprising since scholars have long noted similarities between synagogues and GraecoRoman temples in terms of architecture, artwork, and activities practiced in the buildings. These similarities appear in matters we think of as specically Graeco-Roman as well as in matters we usually associate with Judaism but which were also practiced in Graeco-Roman temples. When analyzed in taxonomic terms, it becomes clear that the similarities between synagogues and Graeco-Roman temples are not random and ad hoc, but indicate that the synagogue belonged to the genus of Graeco-Roman temple. 251
According to Flesher, this is the way non-Jews and, consequently, Jews viewed the synagogue. Both institutions had many activities in common, including those that the synagogue clearly borrowed from the pagan temple. However, despite its apparent attractiveness, this theory presents certain problems. First and foremost is the fact that the pivotal activity in each institution was strikingly dierent, while each relegated to a secondary role (if at all) what was central to the other. For the pagan temple, it was the sacricial act under priestly auspices, for synagogues it was the reading of Scriptures that involved congregational participation. Sacrice was unknown in a synagogue setting (the problematic Sardis evidence aside), as was the public reading of a sacred text in a Greco-Roman temple. In any case, most of the activities that the synagogue had in common with the temple may have evolved independently; there is little reason to assume that the former was specically inuenced by the latter. Did the Diaspora synagogue need the pagan temple to learn about prayer ritual or about its use as a meeting place for communal councils and courts, the collection of donations, etc.? The few persuasive instances of inuence (e.g., manumissions and asylum) are so minimally attested for synagogues as to make any generalization in this direction risky.252 The interest of pagans in the synagogue is indicative of the institutions accessibility
250. See also my more detailed comments in First-Century c.e. Synagogue. 251. Flesher, Prolegomenon, 12153 (cited from pp. 12324). 252. See also my more detailed comments in First-Century c.e. Synagogue.
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as well as importance and centrality in the Jewish community. Evidence for pagan sympathizers and converts has been noted throughout the Diaspora, and in many instances these people chose to be actively supportive of the local Jewish community. The Godfearers of Bosphorus are an interesting example of this, as are Julia Severas involvement and benefaction. Especially noteworthy in this regard is the presence of women among those attracted to Judaism, a phenomenon attested to throughout the Roman world and in a variety of sources.253 Acceptance by many elements in the wider society notwithstanding, the Jews of the Diaspora were continually seeking to gain and maintain their rights, which included conrmation of the status of their central institution. We have also noted numerous occasions on which the Jews were forced to seek ocial Roman validation of these rights in face of attacks and hostility from their neighbors. In these cases, their minority status and distinctive customs proved as irritating and intolerable to some as they were attractive to others. Such a reality may well lie behind much of Philos apologetics, as well as Josephus decision to include numerous edicts issued by the Romans on behalf of Diaspora communities. Such tensions may have played a role in fostering a sense of Jewish marginality, which found expression in the not-uncommon location of the synagogue (and presumably also the community itself ) on the outskirts of a city. Such was the case over a wide geographical area, as we have noted with regard to Delos, Ostia, Macedonia, and Egypt.254 This would seem to have been at least part of the reason why the Acmonian community gave prominence to Julia Severas gift yearsif not decadesafter the original donation, and why the Jews of Berenice honored Marcus Tittius. Let us pursue this last example a bit further. The synagogue inscriptions from Cyrene indeed reect the communitys integration of synchronic and diachronic dimensions. The award ceremony for a Roman ocial was conducted on the Sukkot holiday and included praise of the honoree and a gift of a wreath to be awarded at each meeting (Sabbath?) and New Moon. This award, memorialized on a stele erected in the synagogue, was the unanimous decision of the entire congregation. Jewish communal and religious dimensions come into play in these inscriptions. The ceremony was initiated by the congregation, which decided whom to honor and how. All the events mentioned were conducted on dates from the Jewish calendar: Sukkot, the New Moon, and perhaps the Sabbath. Nevertheless, together with these Jewish components, there were also very denite and discernible Greco-Roman inuences. The leadership bore ocial Greek titles, and the
253. See, for example, Josephus, War 2, 56061 (Damascus); Acts 13:50 (Antioch, Pisidia); ibid., 16:13 (Philippi, Macedonia); Martial, Epigrammata, IV, 4 (M. Stern, GLAJJ, I, 524). See also van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 10913; and below, Chap. 14. 254. Even in Alexandria, the major Jewish residential area, Delta, was on the coast, in the northeastern section of the city.
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personal names listed were almost all Greek as well. The same holds true of the communal institutions noted (i.e., politeuma, amphitheater). Moreover, the forms of bestowing honor (a wreath and woolen llet, a public inscription) and the voting procedure (casting white or black stones) are likewise well-attested Greek practices.255 When all is said and done, the Diaspora synagogue was indeed a creative synthesis of Jewish tradition, the requirements of each community, and the inuence of the surrounding culture. Far from constituting an isolated and insulated minority, or the opposite on the threshold of full assimilationthe Jews succeeded in creating an institution that expressed and reected their needs both as individuals and as a community, and did so within the connes of the cultural and social contexts in which they found themselves. They borrowed, yet within limits; Ptolemaic proseuchai were not dedicated to Ptolemy but on behalf of the king. They honored the ruler as was customary in other dedicatory inscriptions to Greek and Egyptian deities at the time.256 The Jewish place of worship did not resemble the pagan sanctuary or any other place of sacrice; rather, it was a proseuche or synagoge, a place for Torah reading, prayer, and communal activity. Thus, for all its borrowing and diversity, the Jewish communal institution remained quintessentially Jewish. It served the Jewish community and housed its rites and observances, which were inuenced rst and foremostthough far from exclusivelyby a common Jewish past and present. The Jews had brought their own patria to the Diaspora, a cultural and religious tradition that pagans could either respect, resent, or ignore but of which the Jews themselves were proud. They were committed to honoring and perpetuating this heritage, and, for the most part, the surrounding world was supportive. To safeguard and transmit ones traditional customs was an undisputed value in Roman society,257 and on the communal level the synagogue was the main vehicle for achieving this goal. Many Jewish communities even regarded their synagogues as holy places. The very term proseuche may be indicative of this fact, but even more so are specic references to the synagogue as a place of asylum, a sacred precinct (Egypt), or a holy place (Antioch; Philos reference to Essenes).258 The manumission of slaves in the synagogues of the Bosphorus Kingdom may also indicate the degree of sanctity associated with these buildings. The intention seems to have been that this ceremony be carried out not only in the
255. The awarding of a wreath and llet bears further comment. This type of honor is well known in Greco-Roman society and is documented already in classical Greece. Cyrenian Jewry did not hesitate to appropriate this practice, but did so in its own way. Whereas the general practice was to perpetuate or acknowledge such awards on an annual basis, the Jews, for whatever reason, decided to recall this ceremony every month, and perhaps even once a week. 256. Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, 22627, 282. See also Nock, Conversion, 6162. 257. See, for example, Antiquities 16, 44; 19, 290; Against Apion 2, 23235, and comments in A. Kasher, Josephus, Against Apion, II, 51921; and, generally, MacMullen, Paganism, 24. 258. See Goodman, Sacred Space, 46.
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presence of the community, but also in the presence of the Jewish God, as was the case with regard to Apollo in Delphi.259 The reasons for this attribution of sanctity to some Diaspora synagogues are worthy of comment. It seems most likely that such status was an attempt on the part of Jewish communities to accord their synagogues and proseuchai the prestige enjoyed by temples throughout the Hellenistic and Roman worlds. In fact, it was precisely at this time that granting temples the title of sacred and inviolable ( ) increased dramatically and was viewed as a mark of high honor.260 Consequently, some Diaspora communities also adopted this status (whether formally or not), thus enhancing, in their own eyes as well as in the eyes of others, the prestige of their main communal institution. The tenacity with which the Jews defended the integrity of this institution, its functions, and their rights generally is a reection of these commitments and loyalties. From within and without, attempts to undermine what they perceived as their fundamental interests and rights were met head-on. So, for example, when Paul was looked upon as threatening the status quo, he encountered erce resistance in Diaspora synagogues,261 and Jews frequently appealed to Rome in order to counter attempts by municipal authorities to undermine their status. The fact that Diaspora Jewry continued to thrive for centuries in many of these cities and regions attests to the overall success of its eorts.262
259. Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 70911; Gibson, Jewish Manumission Inscriptions, 3649, 13740, although, truth to tell, some pagan deities, but not the God of Israel, are mentioned in these documents. 260. Rigsby, Asylia, 129. 261. Acts 18:6 and esp. 19:9. 262. See, however, the reservations of Bohak (Ethnic Continuity, 18591), at least as regards the Egyptian chora.
five
y the rst century c.e., the synagogue was playing a pivotal institutional role within the Jewish communities of Judaea and the Diaspora.1 This centrality is reected in the wide range of activities that took place there. Though many rstcentury sources focus on particular events relating to a specic synagogue, severale.g., the Theodotos inscription, the New Testament, and a number of documents cited by Josephuslist a number of functions that transpired there. Rabbinic traditions speak of the synagogue as the venue for various educational and other activities, and while this material primarily reects the circumstances of Late Antiquity, some information is probably relevant for the rst century as well.2 The synagogue was also the logical setting in which a Jewish community would honor one of its members or a prominent non-Jew, often via a dedicatory inscription.3 A parallel of sorts exists between the range of functions within the synagogue and those that found expression in some contemporary pagan temples. Frequently surrounded by courtyards and ancillary rooms, these buildings or complexes might at times function
1. For recent comprehensive treatments of the rst-century synagogue in Judaea and the Diaspora, See Binder, Into the Temple Courts, passim; Claussen, Versammlung, passim; Runesson Origins, 169235. 2. See below, Chap. 10. On recent developments in the study of the social setting of early Christianity, see Barton, Communal Dimension, 399427. 3. As in the case of Decimus Valerius Dionysios at Berenice; see above, Chap. 4.
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as libraries, markets, banks, and even as venues for study and learning. As a meeting place for collegia or sodalitates, the temple served some of the religious, social, political, and economic needs of members of these associations.4 The synagogues centrality was also recognized by the outside world. Hostility of pagans toward Jews was often vented through violent attacks on local synagogues.5 In contrast, when a ruler wished to honor or express support for a Jewish community, this, too, was often done within the context of the local synagogue. Thus, Seleucid rulers are reported as having donated spoils from the Jerusalem Temple to a synagogue in Antioch,6 and the many privileges enjoyed by Jewish communities throughout the Diaspora were invariably linked, directly or indirectly, to this institution. Jewish communities, for their part, often chose to honor kings and emperors in the synagogue, as, for example, the Egyptian proseuchai, which were dedicated to Ptolemaic rulers, and the Alexandrian synagogue, which displayed tributes to the emperor.7 Romes Jews named synagogues after Augustus and his viceroy, Agrippa; the Jews of Berenice honored a Roman ocial in their amphitheater at regular meetings; and the Jewish community of Acmonia recalled the benefactions of the pagan noblewoman Julia Severa.8 Moreover, the fact that these various activities are documented for synagogues and proseuchai throughout the Empire argues for a basic similarity between the roles of both institutions at this time. If, as we have argued, these institutions served, rst and foremost, the needs of a community, then it is most likely that such needsbe they of an economic, social, political, or religious naturedid not dier all that signicantly from Judaea to the Diaspora, nor among the various communities in Egypt, Asia Minor, or Rome. Some degree of commonality among rst-century synagogues is evident, for example, in the leadership positions within this institution. While information is severely limited owing to the scarcity of epigraphical evidence, two kinds of leaders appear to have been especially prominent in the rst century: the priest and the archisynagogos.9 The Theo4. Stambaugh, Functions of Roman Temples, 58091. See also C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 76 79, 83; Meeks, First Urban Christians, 3132. According to Flesher, the synagogue was, in fact, patterned after the Greco-Roman temple; see above, Chap. 4. 5. Josephus, Antiquities 19, 299305; idem, War 2, 28592; Philo, Embassy, 13234. On the nature and extent of anti-Jewish sentiments in antiquity, see Daniel, Antisemitism, 4565; Gager, Origins of AntiSemitism, 35112. 6. Josephus, War 7, 44. In the early third century c.e., an emperor referred to in rabbinic literature as Antoninus (in all probability, Caracalla, 211217 c.e.) allegedly donated a menorah to a synagogue; see Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a. 7. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 22, 24, 25, 27, 28, 117; Philo, Embassy 133. 8. Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 14042. The Roman ocial was Marcus Tittius, son of Sextus Aemilia; see above, Chap. 4; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 33. 9. However, we have also had occasion to note other ocial titles associated with the synagogue: (= ), ,and (Egypt); (Berenice, Antioch); and (Gali-
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dotos inscription presents the succession of these two leadership roles over a period of three generations, and a similar instance of a priest who also functioned as a community leader reappears at third-century Dura Europos, where the priest Samuel bar Yedayah served as archon and elder.10 Other rst-century evidence focuses on one role or the other. Philo speaks of priests in Egyptian synagogues who instructed the congregation during Sabbath-day meetings, and an earlier instance of priestly leadership in Egypt may be reected in III Macc. 7, 13. One of the Berenice inscriptions mentions a priest, Cartisthenes son of Archias, at the head of a list of donors who were not community ocers.11 We have noted the centrality of priests at Qumran generally, especially with regard to the ritual of prayer and study.12 Thus, these examples drawn from Judaea and the Diaspora may indeed be reective of the role that priests played in other rst-century synagogues as well. The title archisynagogos is well documented in the literary and epigraphical material, particularly with regard to the post-70 era.13 Also used by pagans,14 this title is attested in a variety of rst-century sources and locales. Besides appearing in the Theodotos inscription, the term is used by Luke with regard to the Galilee (13:14) and Antioch in Pisidia (Acts 13:15), in the Julia Severa inscription from Acmonia, and in an inscription from Egypt of less than certain rst-century dating.15 Here, too, we are dealing with a series of examples that together embrace urban and rural communities in both Judaea and the Diaspora. The prominence of this oce is fairly well attested in early rabbinic tradition. A number of sources refer to the Hebrew equivalent of archisynagogos, the rosh knesset, with respect to the Torah-reading ceremonies in the Temple as well as with regard to the secondand third-century synagogue (and possibly the rst-century synagogue, too).16 On the basis of the evidence at hand, we may conclude that the archisynagogos was not only a com-
lee)all of which have parallels in contemporary pagan contexts; see Oster, Jr., Supposed Anachronism, 2024. 10. Frey, CIJ, II, nos. 82829. 11. Philo, Hypothetica 7, 13. Berenice inscription: above, Chap. 4; and Applebaum, Jews and Greeks, 163 64. In the post-70 era as well, priests appear to have played a prominent role in many synagogues over a wide geographical areaSusiya, Eshtemoa, Naaran, and Naveh in Palestine; Dura Europos (as noted) and Sardis in the Diasporaas well as in the towns and villages mentioned in the list of priestly courses. See Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 7879 n. 11; Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 189; and below, Chap. 15. 12. See above, Chap. 3, note 77; and, more generally, Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 25356. 13. See Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 34852; Claussen, Versammlung, 25664; and below, Chap. 11. 14. TDNT, VII, 84445. See also G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 21416. 15. Acmonia: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 33. Egypt: Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 26. An archisynagogos appears in a later Alexandrian inscription from the third century c.e.; see ibid., no. 18. 16. M Yoma 7, 1; M Sotah 7, 78; T Megillah 3 (pp. 35364).
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munal leader (Acmonia, Galilee), but also might have been a wealthy member of the community (Acmonia) who participated in the ritual, administrative, and nancial aspects of the institution.17 The apparent commonality shared by these far-ung Jewish communities did not preclude the fact that a great deal of diversity also prevailed. As we have had occasion to note, local inuences often shaped the synagogue in its physical appearance, leadership positions, legal standing, and specic customs and practices. Were we better informed, we would undoubtedly detect many subtleand not so subtlecultural and religious dierences among the various communities. Yet, notwithstanding this diversity, there clearly was a broad-based common agenda and range of activities for most, if not all, of these rst-century institutions. Diversity among Diaspora and Judaean synagogues has usually been claimed on the basis of the dierent nomenclature used for the synagogue building. In the former, the term proseuche was prominent (though not exclusively); in the latter, synagoge was almost totally universal. Indeed, all but two references to the Judaean institution use the term synagoge.18 Of the fty-nine references to the Diaspora institution, thirty-one, i.e., some 53%, refer to a proseuche.19 It has been claimed that not only was the geographical factor of importance, but the chronological one as welli.e., the term proseuche predominated until the rst century c.e. and was replaced thereafter by the term synagoge.20 This last claim, although having some basis in fact, rests on somewhat shaky ground owing to the paucity of evidence. True enough, the term proseuche is used almost exclusively in Hellenistic Egypt, the Bosphorus, and Delos, and this accounts for a large percentage of our epigraphic evidence for the rst-century c.e. Diaspora and earlier. Nevertheless, one should be cautious about overgeneralizing on the basis of such admittedly limited data. These three regions may have preferred such nomenclature; elsewhere (e.g., Rome,
17. Others contributed to the synagogue as well, although material regarding individual gifts is limited. Aside from the Theodotos inscription from Jerusalem, two inscriptions from rst-century Egypt refer explicitly to Jews (Alypus and Papous) who built proseuchai (Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 13, 126); several others, only partially preserved, seem to refer to some sort of gift (ibid., nos. 16, 20, 127, 128, 129). Of interest in this regard is a second-century b.c.e. inscription that speaks of a military commander named Eleazar who contributed a sundial, probably to a synagogue (ibid., no. 115 and commentary; see also no. 129). On the rst-century Acmonia inscription referring to Julia Severas gift of a building to the local Jewish community and its restoration by synagogue ocials, see above, Chap. 4. 18. These two exceptions are the Tiberian proseuche and the Qumran . 19. Oster, Jr., Supposed Anachronism, 186. On the suggestion that the proseuche in these and other instances refers to a Jewish institution, see Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 6469; M. Stern, Jewish Diaspora, 15557; Levinskaya, Jewish or Gentile Prayer House? 15459; idem, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 20725. Some, however, have expressed reservations; see, for example, G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, I, 2528; Kraemer, Jewish and Christian Fish, 14447. 20. Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 16978; Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, 33; G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 21920.
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Greece, Asia Minor, and Cyrene), synagoge and other terms appear to have been more in vogue.21 It may well be that the terms proseuche and synagoge reect a dierent emphasis in each institution. The former seems to indicate a desire by some Diaspora synagogues to highlight their religious dimension, and some of these institutions even acquired a measure of sanctity unknown in most contemporary Judaean synagogues.22 Such a development may have been due to the Diaspora synagogues unique context, being distant from the Jerusalem Temple and surrounded by pagan religious models. Moreover, the greater need of Diaspora Jews to dene themselves in religious-communal terms vis--vis their pagan surroundings may also have had a bearing on the nature of and emphasis within their synagogues.23 The Judaean synagogue, on the other hand, was unique not only because it was referred to almost exclusively by one term, synagogue, but also because, at this stage, the term seems to have been bereft of any religious connotation. The synagogue in Judaea was thus designated by a term denoting a place of gathering; it was primarily a communal institution whose religious prole was less pronounced than that of its Diaspora counterpart.
21. On other names for the synagogue, see above, Chap. 4, notes 23839. 22. As we noted in Chap. 3 with respect to the Dor incident, it is quite likely that coastal synagogues may have been inuenced by Diaspora models, as, for example, in the sanctity ascribed to it by both Jew and non-Jew. 23. L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 2122. What is the signicance of the term proseuche? The word itself appears some 114 times in the Septuagint as a translation of the Hebrew word for prayer, tellah ( .)However, it is doubtful, as we shall see below, whether the prayer component was the dominant feature of Egyptian Jewrys liturgy. As in Judaea, the Torah-reading ceremony appears to have been central. Thus, it is unlikely that the term proseuche would have been chosen owing solely to this factor. Another consideration that may have come into play here in opting for a term such as proseuche instead of synagoge is the fact that the latter had been (or was being) appropriated in the Septuagint to designate the community, a translation of the Hebrew terms qahal and edah. Therefore, not only was the term synagogue more neutral or secular (to invoke modern parlance), but it was also used for other biblical concepts in the Greek-speaking, Septuagint-reading Diaspora. 24. Josephus, Life 27198, 331; and above, Chap. 3.
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There is also some indirect evidence that Egyptian synagogues served a wider communal purpose. As will be recalled, several inscriptions mention when referring to the proseuche.27 What precisely is intended remains unclear, but it may well be a reference to multipurpose ancillary rooms such as those in contemporary pagan temples.28 Moreover, the building(s) mentioned in the Theodotos inscription, together with the Gamla, Delos, and perhaps Ostia buildings, as well as the inscriptions from Cyrene seem to indicate that these structures functioned in a similar capacity. In addition to serving as a meeting place for the community as a whole, the synagogue also hosted various subgroups within the community. Several papyri from Hellenistic Egypt indicate that a burial society once met in a local proseuche; another papyrus indicates that some sort of association in Apollonopolis Magna organized a series of banquets, probably in the local synagogue.29 This may also have been the case with regard to the Sambathic association in Naucratis, although the precise nature of this group (Jews? sebomenoi? ) remains unclear.30 The various professional guilds mentioned in the Tosefta 31 in connection with the Alexandrian synagogue may have used the premises for professional gatherings as well as for worship purposes. One of the most intriguing functions of the ancient synagogue that is mentioned on a number of occasions is its use as a place for communal meals. Once again, Josephus provides us with the clearest statements of this activity. In an edict issued by Julius Caesar (cited above), the following rights are conrmed: Now it displeases me that such statutes
25. Antiquities 14, 235; see also the decree of the people of Halicarnassus, where the religious component of Jewish rights is emphasized (discussed above, Chap. 4). 26. Antiquities 14, 25961. Communal use of the synagogue is likewise attested in a later period; see B Shabbat 150a; B Ketubot 5a; and Chap. 10 below. 27. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, nos. 9, 25. 28. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, III, no. 1433; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 87. See also Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 165 n. 68; Dion, Synagogues et temples, 60. 29. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, nos. 13839. Similar societies or individuals are mentioned in rabbinic literature with regard to Second Temple Jerusalem; see T Megillah 3, 15 (p. 357); Tractate Semaot 12, 5 (ed. Higger, 19596); and Ginzberg, Commentary, II, 5556. It is not clear, however, whether they convened in a synagogue setting. 30. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 26. 31. T Sukkah 4, 5 (p. 273).
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should be made against our friends and allies, and that they should be forbidden to live in accordance with their customs and to contribute money to common meals and sacred rites. . . . I forbid other religious societies but permit these people alone to assemble and feast in accordance with their native customs and ordinances. 32 The edict is a general recognition of two basic rights that the Jews enjoyed: to assemble according to their ancestral tradition and to collect monies for communal meals. Similarly, in writing to the Jews of Asia Minor, Augustus makes reference to their sacred books and sacred monies that are stored in the synagogue (here referred to as a sabbateion) and banquet hall ().33 It is dicult to determine the nature of these meals. Were they holiday feasts, meals for transients and visitors, or events sponsored by local Jewish associations or individuals? Alternatively, they might have been regular communal gatherings on the Sabbath and perhaps New Moon. Or perhaps they were all of the above in various permutations over time and place. Whatever the case, one fact remains eminently clear from the documents quoted by Josephus: These meals were recognized by Romans and Jews alike as important communal activities that played an integral part in the corporate life of the Jews.34 The centrality of the meal in ancient Judaism generally is well attested. Many Jewish sects in the Second Temple period, such as the Pharisaic avurah, the Essene or Qumran sectarians, and the Therapeutae in Egypt, featured communal meals;35 one mishnaic
32. Antiquities 14, 21416. See Pucci Ben Zeev, Jewish Rights, 10718. 33. Antiquities 16, 164. See comments in Marcus, Josephus, Antiquities, LCL, VIII, 273 n. c, and especially those of Pucci Ben Zeev, Jewish Rights, 23556. It is possible that an edict issued to the Jews of Sardis, assuring them of their right to oer prayers and sacrices to God (Antiquities 14, 26061), may likewise point to a communal banquet. As noted above (Chap. 4), the reference to sacrices is baing. Does it mean oerings in general, and does the word sacrices reect a pagan misunderstanding of Jewish ritual; does it perhaps refer to actual sacrices made by gentile worshippers to the God of Israel; or does it point to what we are discussing, i.e., communal meals or banquets of the Jewish community or parts thereof? On the above, see Marcus, Josephus, Antiquities, LCL, VII, 589 n. d; Bickerman, Altars of Gentiles, 151; S. J. D. Cohen, Pagan and Christian Evidence, 166; Leonhardt, (A 14:260), 189203. The word sacrices may refer simply to the monies sent by Sardis Jews to Jerusalem, as per Josephus, Antiquities 16, 171. Might this interpretation nd substantiation in ibid., 12, 10? More recently, Runesson has interpreted this reference to sacrice as reecting what he considers to have been normative throughout the Diaspora, namely, that synagogues there were initially Jewish temples replete with sacrices and other cultic functions and appurtenances (Origins, 40176; and with respect to Sardis in particular, 46466). 34. An interesting twist to the association between synagogue and sacred meal, if indeed historical, would be the account in III Macc. 7, 1920, which tells of the proseuche that was allegedly built on the site of the festive banquet commemorating the salvation of the Alexandrian community. 35. Pharisaic avurah: Lieberman, Discipline, 199200 (= Texts and Studies, 200207); Neusner, Fellowship, 12542; Oppenheimer, Am Ha-aretz, 11869. Essenes or Qumran sectarians: War 2, 12833; 1QS 6:45; 1QSa 2:1721, CD 13, 23. Regarding the Essenes, Philo writes: They live together, formed into clubs, bands of comradeship, with common meals, and never cease to conduct all their aairs to serve the general weal (Hypothetica 11, 5). See Delcor, Repas cultuels, 40125. See also van der Ploeg, Meals
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passage may also indicate that meals were eaten regularly in synagogues.36 At times, these repasts were intimately connected to cultic acts, as was the Passover sacrice in the Jerusalem Temple. Such meals, of course, became a central feature in the nascent Christian church as well.37 Although Jewish literary sources tend to ignore this aspect of synagogue life, comparative pagan material is not lacking. Communal meals within temple precincts are well known in the Roman world.38 Moreover, temple settings were well suited to provide space for either large family aairs (space not ordinarily available in private homes) or various kinds of fraternities.39 As in the Ostia synagogue, temples, too, were at times appointed with kitchens for such purposes. Archaeological remains of banquet areas within temple precincts have been found throughout Greece, Asia Minor, and Syria, in Nabatean temples, and in the mithraeum discovered in Caesarea Maritima.40 In addition to the pagan temples, Hellenistic and Roman religious and other associations likewise sponsored such meals. Aelius Aristides describes a gathering of Serapis worshippers at which the icon of the god was brought into the banquet hall and set on a chair in order to participate in the festivities.41 Devotees of Isis, Asclepius, Jupiter, Heracles, and others are noted as having incorporated communal meals into their religious practice.42 Thus, it would appear that Jewish communities throughout the Empire were adopting (and undoubtedly adapting) widespread practices of the Hellenistic and Semitic worlds, incorporating them in one way or another into their communal life. So central
of the Essenes, 16375; Klinghardt, Manual of Discipline, 26162. On the general identication of the Essenes with the Qumran sect, despite recent reservations by some, see Vermes and Goodman, Essenes According to the Classical Sources, 1214. Therapeutae: Philo, Contemplative Life 6490. 36. M Zavim 3, 2. See comments of Rabin, Qumran Studies, 34. The mishnah of the Bavli and of Lowes MS reads instead of . See also Alon, Studies, I, 28691. Inscriptions from later synagogue buildings in Caesarea and Stobi specically mention a dining hall (triclinium); see Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 11517; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 10; and Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 16768. It is interesting to note that the building at Ostia (from its fourth-century stage, at the very least) had kitchen facilities; see White, Building Gods House, 69 n. 24; and Hengel, op. cit., 16772. On Netzers claim to have discovered a triclinium in a Jericho synagogue, see above, Chap. 3. 37. See, for example, I Cor. 11:1734, as well as Meeks, First Urban Christians, 15762; Kuhn, Lords Supper and Communal Meal at Qumran, 6593; M. Black, Scrolls and Christian Origins, 10218. 38. Nock, Early Gentile Christianity, 7276; C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 7779; Kane, Mithraic Cultic Meal, 31351; Meslin, Convivialit ou communion sacramentelle? 295306; Lipiski, Le repas sacr, 130*34*; Burkert, Oriental Symposia, 724. 39. MacMullen, Paganism, 3639, esp. n. 24. 40. See above, notes 35 and 36; Negev, Nabataean Necropolis, 111, 12729; Bull, Mithraeum of Caesarea, 79. 41. Oratio 8, 54, 1. 42. C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 4748; MacMullen, Paganism, 3839. At Petra, meals were held in rock-hewn chambers, and a participant was referred to as hbr; see Cantineau, Nabaten, II, 63.
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were these meals in Jewish life that they, along with several other activities, became subjects of conict and tension between the Jews and their neighbors (see above, Chaps. 3 and 4). Among its communal functions, the synagogue also served as a place for administering justice. Attested already in the Septuagint version of Susannah (see Chap. 2), adjudication was one of the basic privileges granted to Diaspora communities,43 and in Judaea this right was exercised for the most part on a local level. New Testament evidence is helpful in this regard. One tradition, appearing in each of the synoptic gospels, makes this point rather clearly: Beware of men; for they will deliver you up to councils and og you in their synagogues; and you will be dragged before governors and kings for my sake, to bear testimony before them and the Gentiles. 44 Two stages of adjudication are indicated; sentences were meted out in the synagogue, and, the trial, in all probability, was conducted there as well. At times, such procedures may have constituted only a rst stage. More serious cases might then have been appealed to higher courts, while others might have been heard from the outset by these higher authorities, whether Jewish or Roman. Flogging carried out regularly in the synagogue is further indicated by another passage in Matthew, following Jesus famous Woe speech: Therefore I send you prophets and wise men and scribes, some of whom you will kill and crucify, and some you will scourge in your synagogues and persecute from town to town. 45 Pauls speech on the steps of the barracks in Jerusalem (Acts 22:19) once again recalls this phenomenon. His words are especially poignant, for he is presumably speaking from personal experience: I said: Lord, here of all places they know that I imprisoned those who believed in You, or beat them in the synagogues. 46 The synagogue as a court and place of punishment in later centuries is explicitly indicated in rabbinic sources as well as by Epiphanius.47 Undoubtedly, all sorts of judicial matters were addressed within the synagogue framework, one of whichthe manumission of slavesis well attested in the epigraphical evidence, albeit primarily in one particular region. As noted above (Chap. 4), a number of rst-century inscriptions from the Bosphorus relate to this public procedure in a proseuche setting, some stipulating that the freed slave must continue to visit the synagogue and that the community would protect him or her from re-enslavement.48
43. On Susannah, see Chap. 2, notes 7576. See also C. A. Moore, Daniel, Esther and Jeremiah: Additions, 104: So they went to the synagogue of the city where they were living, and all the sons of Israel who were there sat in judgment. On these rights, see Antiquities 14, 235, 25961. 44. Matt. 10:1718; Mark 13:9; Luke 21:12. See also Luke 12:11. 45. Matt. 23:34. 46. Acts 22:19. Elsewhere (II Cor. 11:24), Paul speaks of being ogged by Jews thirty-nine times on ve dierent occasions; see Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 2021. 47. M Makkot 3, 12; Y Bikkurim 1, 3, 64a; Epiphanius, Panarion 30, 11; and below, Chap. 10. 48. See above, Chap. 4, notes 21819.
144 h i s t o r i c a l d e v e l o p m e n t o f t h e s y n a g o g u e
The rst-century synagogue also provided for visitors of all stripes, perhaps indigents as well. While most evidence in this regard comes from the post-70 period,49 the one clear and explicit pre-70 source is the Theodotos inscription, which notes that this synagogue also functioned as a hostel ( ).50 How unique this function was to Jerusalemthe focus of Temple pilgrimageis unclear. The fact that synagogues elsewhere also served such a purpose later on may point to other needs in the pre-70 era as well. It appears that a wide range of charitable activities were housed in the synagogue. As noted in Chap. 3, the two Pharisaic schools, Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai, disagreed over the propriety of making decisions in the synagogue on the Sabbath regarding charity to the poor, and Matthew may refer to the same phenomenon when he has Jesus caution his followers not to trumpet their gifts as do the hypocrites in the synagogues and streets that they may be praised by men. 51 In all likelihood, these funds were kept somewhere on the synagogue premises, and the actual distribution of monies likewise took place there again, as was the case later on.52 We have seen that in the Diaspora, the right to collect funds for a variety of purposes was specically guaranteed to the Jews, as reected in the general privilege issued by Julius Caesar.53 Although evidence for schools in synagogue buildings is negligible for the pre-70 period, there is reason to believe that synagogue premises served in such a capacity in many, if not most, places in this era. One late rabbinic tradition speaks of 480 synagogues in pre-70 Jerusalem, each of which had a primary school ( ) and an advanced school ( 45.) Despite this exaggerated and schematic number, the assumption that many children learned in some sort of formal setting at this time should not be construed as far-fetched. In the Greco-Roman world, educational frameworks for children were well known.55 Moreover, rabbinic material attributes the introduction of some sort of public schooling to several personalities in the Second Temple period, Simeon b. Shata (rst century b.c.e.) and the high priest Joshua b. Gamla (rst century c.e.).56 Even though such attributions are highly questionable (although, truth to tell, it is hard to fathom why Joshua b. Gamla, a relatively unknown gure, would have been singled out for no reason whatsoever), some sort of educational apparatus may already have been functioning (at
49. For example, B Pesaim 100b101a; Y Megillah 3, 74a; the multiroom synagogue complexes as at Dura, Ostia, En Gedi, and ammat Tiberias may indicate a provision for lodging accommodations. 50. Frey, CIJ, II, no. 1404; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 79; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 7686; and above, Chap. 3. 51. T Shabbat 16, 22 (p. 79); Matt. 6:2. 52. See, for example, T Terumot 1, 10 (p. 109); T Bava Batra 8, 14 (p. 158). 53. Antiquities 14, 215. 54. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d; Y Ketubot 13, 35c; B Ketubot 105a. 55. Marrou, History of Education, 199209, 33536. 56. Y Ketubot 8, 32c; B Bava Batra 21a. See also Schrer, History, II, 41721; Ebner, Elementary Education, 3850, 1057; S. Safrai, Education, 946., and esp. Goodblatt, Sources, 83103.
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least in certain places) in this pre-70 period. The well-established and widespread local educational system already reected in rabbinic discussions from the second century onward (see below, Chap. 10) was probably not created overnight. Such frameworks were not necessarily under rabbinic auspices; these schools seem to have been a communal responsibility and thus might well have existed much before the time the editors of rabbinic literature began including such material in their compilations. Josephus, for his part, emphasizes the instruction received by Jewish children, presumably reecting, at the very least, the situation in the rst century.57 Even discounting his proclivity to exaggerate in matters of Jewish piety, there may well be some truth in his statements. Although Josephus does not specify a public setting, one seems to be implied by his far-reaching claims for Jewish literacy; if a public institution was involved, and it was not only a private matter as in the Greco-Roman world, it in all probability was the local synagogue. The Theodotos inscription as well may allude to such a framework of instruction when it refers to study of the commandments, but we cannot be sure of its precise implication. Other forms of instruction within the context of the synagogue took place on the Sabbath and included the community as a whole (see below). Until now, we have focused on the communal non-worship dimension of the early synagogue. Although information in this area is limited, there can be little doubt that this aspect of the synagogue constituted the very heart of the institution at this time. Serving as a place of gathering on a regular (i.e., daily) basis, the synagogue functioned rst and foremost as a community center with a broad and varied agenda.58
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ticular agendasfocus on the religious dimension of the synagogue, and it is to this aspect that we now turn.60 Information regarding the religious agenda of the synagogue is uneven. Some activities are well documented, and there is a virtual consensus as to their centrality; others remain more elusive with respect to both their form and content, while still others are the subject of scholarly debate as to whether they, in fact, existed at all in this period and, if so, in what form. The rst category for which documentation is comparatively rich includes the reading and study of Scriptures (the Torah and Prophets) on Sabbaths and holidays. The second includes related Torah-reading activities such as the sermon and targum. The last category refers to communal prayer, the existence of which at this timeespecially in Judaeais far from clear. We will examine each separately.
Torah Reading
By the rst century c.e., the Torah had become the holiest object in Judaism outside the Temple itself and its appurtenances. As early as the second century b.c.e., the Letter of Aristeas, composed in Egypt, had spelled out the sanctity of the Torah, in this case in its Greek translation. When the seventy-two emissaries from Judaea had completed their translations and presented Ptolemy Philadelphus with a copy of the Torah, the king reputedly stood for a moment in silence and then bowed seven times, saying: I thank you, good sirs, and him [i.e., the Jerusalem high priest] that sent you even more, but most of all I thank God, whose holy words these are. 61 Whether Ptolemy actually said this or not, the author succeeded in conveying, at the very least, the awe and sanctity of this text. At about the same time, I Maccabees notes that on several occasions prior to battle, the Maccabees had the Torah read aloud in order to invoke divine aid and gain scriptural
trary and articial distinction between the terms proseuche and synagoge and thus not relating to the plain meaning of the former (i.e., a place of prayer); explaining away contradictory evidence as not reecting contemporary Jewish norms (e.g., Qumran); positing a dierence between weekday and Sabbath rituals (thus dismissing the Tiberias evidence); ignoring the sacred status attributed to a number of pre-70 buildings (which would obviously be connected with their religious dimension), and more. Most crucial of all is her narrow denition of what exactly constituted worship in the ancient synagogue. I would claim evidence for prayer asidethat the reading of sacred texts and the accompanying instruction were recognized and valid forms of worship in the Jewish community. To dene worship simply as the recitation of prayers and psalms is quite arbitrary. For more extensive critiques of her thesis, see Reif, Sabbath and Synagogue (review), 61012; and esp. van der Horst, Was the Synagogue a Place of Sabbath Worship? 60. On the diering foci between the archaeological data and literary sources regarding the nature of the rst-century synagogue, see my First-Century Synagogue. 61. Letter of Aristeas 177. The letter goes on to describe the elaborate reception accorded the completed Greek translation of the Torah by the Alexandrian Jewish community and Ptolemy himself (ibid., 30821). It has been suggested that the Torah enjoyed such a status already in the biblical period, according to Deuteronomy; see van der Toorn, Iconic Book, 22948.
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support; a letter from Jonathan to Sparta makes reference to the Holy Books in our possession. 62 Josephus relates two incidents in the mid-rst century that highlight this very special status. Around the year 50, while searching a Judaean village, a Roman soldier found a Torah scroll that, according to War, he tore and threw into a re. Enraged by this blasphemy, the Jews demanded (and received) retribution.63 The second instance is a fascinating aside that Josephus relates while reporting the events in Caesarea ca. 66 c.e. He notes that when eeing the city, the Jews made sure that they took their Torah scroll with them. However, this angered the governor, Florus, and the Jews were arrested and put into chains because they had dared to remove this object from the city.64 This account clearly reects the sanctity in which the Torah scroll was held by both Jews and non-Jews. But why were the Romans outraged by the removal of a Torah scroll (or scrolls) from Caesarea? What dierence would it make to them? Their reaction can be understood only by assuming that the Torah was regarded as the holiest object that the local Jewish community possessed, and for the Romans it was the Jewish equivalent of a statue of a pagan deity. Its presence served as added insurance for the protection of the city, and its absence increased its vulnerability. Associating the sanctity of the Torah scroll with that of a statue of a pagan deity is further indicated in twoalbeit laterDiaspora sources, one literary and one architectural. The rst is a papyrus from second-century c.e. Egypt describing an event from the time of Trajan; we learn of two disputing delegations, one representing the Jewish community, the other the pagan population, which were dispatched from Alexandria to Rome, each to present its case before the emperor. The pagans, we are told, brought with them a statue of their god, the Jews some other object. Here, unfortunately, the papyrus is damaged and the object that the Jewish delegation brought is unknown. Tcherikover has posited, with a good deal of plausibility, that the Jews brought a Torah scroll as their source of divine protection and support, functioning in much the same way as the statue that accompanied the pagan delegation.65 The second example comes from third-century Dura Europos, whose synagogue, well known for its stunning wall paintings, was heavily inuenced in its architecture and art by
62. I Macc. 3, 48; II Macc. 8, 23; I Macc. 12, 9. 63. War 2, 22831: At that the Jews were roused as though it were their whole country which had been consumed in the ames; and, their religion acting like some instrument to draw them together, all on the rst announcement of the news hurried in a body to Cumanus at Caesarea, and implored him not to leave unpunished the author of such an outrage on God and on the law. See also the parallel account in Antiquities 20, 11317. On this incident and its larger context during Cumanus governorship, see Schrer, History, I, 45860; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 26369; Aberbach, Conicting Accounts, 1.; M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 7880. 64. War 2, 292. See also L. Levine, Roman Caesarea, 2233. 65. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, II, 8287 and also 8586 and n. 17.
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other Duran and eastern religious buildings.66 One clear link is the centrality and prominence of the shrine (i.e., aedicula) in the naos of the temples and in the synagogue. The aediculae of the temples each contained a statue of a deity; the aedicula of the synagogue, a Torah scroll.67 Finally, as in Caesarea, the Torahs sanctity was clearly acknowledged by Rome itself, and in a very public and ocial manner. Josephus notes a number of spoils of war (many appearing on the Arch of Titus as well) in the triumphal procession in Rome following the victory over the Jews and Jerusalem in 70 c.e. Preceding images of victory and the Roman conquerors Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian were a series of Temple objects (the golden showbread table and menorah) and, lastly, a Torah scroll.68 Thus, the centrality of the Torah-reading ceremony in Jewish worship of the pre-70 synagogue should come as no surprise.69 In fact, almost every source from the Second Temple period indicates this importance explicitly. Josephus:
He [Moses] appointed the Law to be the most excellent and necessary form of instruction, ordaining, not that it should be heard once for all or twice or on several occasions, but that every week men should desert their other occupations and assemble to listen to the Law and to obtain a thorough and accurate knowledge of it, a practice which all other legislators seem to have neglected.70
Philo:
He [Augustus] knew therefore that they have houses of prayer [ proseuche] and meet together in them, particularly on the sacred Sabbaths when they receive as a body training in their ancestral philosophy.71
66. Rostovze, Dura and Its Art, 6899; Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 34849; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IX, 2937; Perkins, Art of Dura, 10., 3369, 11426. 67. Rostovtze, Dura and Its Art, s.v., aedicula; Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 16; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IX, 6567. 68. See War 7, 14852, and depictions of the Arch of Titus. 69. On the public dimension of the Torahthat it belonged to the Jewish people as a wholesee A. Baumgarten, Torah as a Public Document, 1724. An interesting account of the utilization of a Torah scroll that would lend dramatic eect to a speech is oered by Josephus when describing one of his archrivals who harangued the Tiberian populace: The principal instigator of the mob was Jesus, son of Sapphias, at that time chief magistrate of Tiberias, a knave with an instinct for introducing disorder into grave matters, and unrivalled in fomenting sedition and revolution. With a copy of the laws of Moses in his hands, he now stepped forward and said: If you cannot, for your own sakes, citizens, detest Josephus, x your eyes on your countrys laws, which your commander-in-chief intended to betray, and for their sakes hate the crime and punish the audacious criminal (Life 13435). On Torah scrolls in the rst centuries c.e., see Haran, Torah Scrolls, 93106; S. Schwartz, Imperialism, 4966. 70. Against Apion 2, 175. See also Antiquities 16, 43, a passage purportedly taken from a speech delivered by Nicolaus of Damascus before Agrippa on behalf of the Jews. See also H. Weiss, Sabbath in the Writings of Josephus, 36390, and bibliography listed therein. 71. Embassy 156. See also Philos comment in his On Dreams 2, 127.
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He [Moses] required them to assemble in the same place on these seventh days and, sitting together in a respectful and orderly manner, hear the laws read so that none should be ignorant of them.72
New Testament:
And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up; and he went to the synagogue, as his custom was, on the Sabbath day. And he stood up to read; and there was given to him the book of the prophet Isaiah. He opened the book and found the place where it was written . . .74 But when they departed from Perga, they came to Antioch in Pisidia, and went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and sat down. And after the reading of the law and the prophets the rulers of the synagogue sent unto them.75 For Moses of old time has in every city those that preach him, being read in the synagogues every Sabbath day.76
Rabbinic literature:
And a wooden bima was to be found in the center [of the hall, referring to an Alexandrian synagogue], and the azzan of the synagogue would stand in the corner [of the bima] with kerchiefs in his hand. When one came and took hold of the scroll to read [a section from the Torah], he [the azzan] would wave the kerchiefs and all the people would answer Amen for each blessing. He would [again] wave the kerchiefs and all the people would respond Amen. 77
Archaeology:
Theodotos, son of Vettenos, priest and archisynagogos, son of an archisynagogos and grandson of an archisynagogos, built the synagogue for reading the Law and studying the commandments.78
72. Hypothetica 7, 12. 73. Every Good Man Is Free 8182. Suetonius (Tiberius 32:2) notes one Diogenes who lectured every Sabbath in Rhodes. 74. Luke 4:1622. 75. Acts 13:1415. 76. Ibid., 15:21. 77. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273); and Lieberman, TK, IV, 89192. 78. Frey, CIJ, II, no. 1404; and above, Chap. 3.
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Thus, there can be little question that scriptural readings constituted the core of contemporary Jewish worship in the synagogue. A remarkablethough very laterabbinic tradition articulates the highest possible religious value of such activity. On the verse and Moses gathered all the congregation of Israel (Exod. 35:1), the midrash continues: The Holy one, Blessed be He, said to Israel: If you congregate each Sabbath in your synagogues and read Torah, I will accredit you as if you bore witness on me that I am your King. 79 As already noted, we have no rm evidence for the initial stages of this custom.80 Whether this was a strictly internal development or one stimulated from without, or both, must remain moot for the present. The form and frequency of the Torah-reading ceremony are likewise uncertain. Did Torah reading, once introduced, constitute a regular Sabbath practice, as rabbinic literature would have it and as a number of modern scholars hold? 81 Or did the custom begin as Sabbath readings in preparation for the festivals, especially Passover, a theory that seems to be indicated in a number of rabbinic sources and that has found modern adherents as well? 82 Or perhaps, at rst, sections of the Torah deemed especially meaningful were chosen, irrespective of the calendar or a specic order? 83 Whatever these early stages of Torah reading were, the question arises as to when this ceremony became institutionalized as the central component of the synagogue. As discussed above (Chap. 2), the chronological parameters are probably to be xed between the fth and third centuries b.c.e. On the one hand, the terminus post quem is undoubtedly the period of Ezra and Nehemiah, when the rst public Torah-reading ceremony (albeit a
79. Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 35, 1 (p. 722). 80. See above, Chap. 2. 81. Rabbinic literature ascribes the weekly Sabbath readings to Moses and the weekday readings (Mondays and Thursdays) to Ezra or the prophets and elders (Y Megillah 4, 1, 75a; B Bava Qama 82a). See also S. Safrai, Synagogue, 91213. 82. M Megillah 3, 6; Sifra, Emor, 17 (ed. Weiss, p. 103a); SifreDeuteronomy 127 (p. 185). See also B Megillah 32a, and Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 13031. According to this theory, the earliest readings were taken from Pentateuchal sections relating to a specic Sabbath or festival and deal with the laws and rituals associated with each. This seems to be reected in the earliest stage of festival readings, as preserved in the Mishnah, where, inter alia, the four special Sabbaths before Passover are noted (M Megillah 3, 45). Similarly, on the Day of Atonement, the high priest would not only perform the prescribed ritual, but also read the scriptural section detailing these ceremonies (M Yoma 1, 3). Thus, Thackeray has suggested (Septuagint and Jewish Worship, 43.) that holiday readings per Leviticus 23, as well as those relating to the four special Sabbaths, eventually led to regular weekly readings and, ultimately, the triennial cycle. Assuming a gradual introduction of these readings, one might guardedly suggest that, of the special prePassover Sabbath readings, Shabbat Sheqalim (dealing with the half-sheqel tax) and Shabbat Parah (dealing with purity matters) were introduced in the Hasmonean period, when priestly and Temple concerns came to the fore in Jewish society. 83. For example, Deuteronomy 32, as suggested in McNamara, New Testament and the Palestinian Targum, 112. See also Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 132. Gilat (Studies in the Development of the Halakha, 35657) opts for the last two possibilities.
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one-time occurrence) was held. On the other hand, by the third century the existence of a regular communal Torah-reading framework was probably a prime factor, though not necessarily the only one, in the creation of the Septuagint. Such a translation would have served, inter alia, the liturgical needs of the Egyptian Jewish community.84 This liturgical practice of reading Scriptures was probably brought to Egypt from Judaea rather than created by the edgling Diaspora community; there is no evidence of such a custom in the earlier Elephantine community, which ourished in Upper Egypt in the fth century b.c.e. The brief account of the high priest Ezekias reading to his friends from the Torah (lit., scroll) upon his arrival in Egypt may indeed point to such a practice.85 By the rst century, a weekly ceremony featuring the communal reading and study of holy texts had become a universal Jewish practice. It was a unique liturgical feature in the ancient world; no such form of worship was known in paganism, yet certain mystery cults in the Hellenistic-Roman world produced sacred texts that were read on occasion.86 However, it was indeed sui generis for an entire Jewish community to devote regular meetings to such an activity. This, it appears, is the context in which to understand the above-quoted sources (especially Josephus and Philo). While their tone is manifestly selflaudatory, there was cause. These authors were indeed trumpeting a form of worship that set the Jewish community apart from the surrounding cultures.87 It has been generally acknowledged that the prevalent custom, in Judaea at least, was to complete the Torah-reading cycle within a three- to three-and-a-half-year period.88 This is explicitly documented only for later Roman and Byzantine Palestine but is presumed to have been operative in the pre-70 period as well.89 These later sources regularly contrast
84. Schrer, History, III, 47476; Kahle, Cairo Geniza, 13233. Cf., however, Bickerman ( Jews in the Greek Age, 1025), who views the Ptolemaic courts initiative as the main impetus for the translation. 85. Against Apion 1, 18389, and GLAJJ, I, 42. 86. See, for example, Nock, Conversion, 2632; Momigliano, On Pagans, Jews and Christians, 8991 n. 10; Patte, Early Jewish Hermeneutic, 36; Thackeray, Septuagint and Jewish Worship, 43. On the Torah reading generally, see Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 12942. 87. See Momigliano, On Pagans, Jews and Christians, 8991. This unique practice was already adumbrated in Deut. 31:913; see Tigay, Deuteronomy, 499502. 88. For a discussion of this issue and the various approaches (old and new), see below, Chap. 16. 89. On the triennial Torah-reading cycle in pre-70 Palestine, see, for example, the classic studies of Bchler, Reading of the Law and Prophets, 42068; Heinemann, Triennial Lectionary Cycle, 4148; Perrot, La lecture de la Bible, 147.; idem, Reading of the Bible, 13759. According to Guilding (Fourth Gospel and Jewish Worship, 2457, 22933), not only is the triennial cycle an early phenomenon, but the literary form of the gospel of John, and even the Pentateuch itself, was based on such a cycle. For a critique of this thesis, especially as it relates to the Pentateuch, see Porter, Pentateuch and the Triennial Lectionary Cycle, 16374. For a later dating of the triennial cycle, see Wacholder, Prolegomenon, xviixliii. According to Modrzejewski ( Jews of Egypt, 9596), the rst-century Cairo scroll of Deuteronomy (Papyrus Fouad 266) may indicate a triennial reading cycle. On the triennial Torah-reading cycle in Roman-Byzantine Palestine, see B Megillah 29b; Dierences in Customs, no. 48 (ed. Margalioth, pp. 172 73; ed. Lewin, pp. 9899). Indirect rabbinic evidence for this practice may be found in M Megillah 3, 4;
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the Palestinian practice with that of Babylonia, where the Torah reading was completed in one year and was marked by the holiday of Simat Torah. Fleischer, however, has suggested that the annual cycle originated in Palestine as well and that it actually predated the triennial practice that, according to him, developed only in the tannaitic perod.90 Even though his suggested sequence rests on a series of arguable assumptions, an original Palestinian provenance for the annual cycle is certainly conceivable.91 Information available regarding Torah reading in specic settings is spotty. Presumably, the Torah was read on at least two occasions in the towns and villages whose local priestly courses were ociating in the Jerusalem Temple. To the best of our knowledge, regular readings did not take place in the Temple, even at the end of the Second Temple period, or at Qumran as part of the communal liturgy.92 Philo describes Essene Sabbath gatherings in synagogues replete with Torah reading and instruction 93 and is apparently referring to Essene communities throughout Judaea and not specically to the Qumran sectarians;94 as was the case in other local synagogues, Sabbath worship included scriptural readings. Presumably, these village- or town-dwelling Essenes did not have the same time available on a daily basis for continuous study as did their peers at Qumran, and thus the Sabbath oered an opportunity for more intensive study. If this assumption is correct, then we have evidence here for signicant liturgical variation, even within the sect, that was linked to geographical and social considerations.
Leviticus Rabbah 3, 6 (p. 69); Tractate Soferim 16, 8 (pp. 29192); see also Y Shabbat 16, 5, 15c; Esther Rabbah, Proem 3; comments by A. Epstein, Meqadmoniot Hayehudim, 54.; and below, Chap. 16. Traces of the triennial cycle have been detected in the presumed divisions of various midrashic works and targumim; see, for example, Albeck, Midrash Wayyiqra Rabba, 2543; Theodor and Albeck, Genesis Rabbah, 97. (introduction); J. Mann, Bible as Read, 11 (introduction); Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 132; Fried, List of the Sedarim, 10313; Shinan, Numerical Proem, 89. Ancient piyyutim likewise reect a triennial division; see Heinemann, Triennial Lectionary Cycle, 4148; Zulay, Studies on Yannai, 213. Later reports of this practice, from twelfth-century Egypt, are to be found in the Itinerary of Benjamin of Tudela (pp. 6263), Genizah fragments (Fleischer, EretzIsrael Prayer and Prayer Rituals, 220), and Maimonides, Laws of Prayer 13, 1. 90. Fleischer, Annual and Triennial Torah Reading, 2543. 91. Admittedly, assuming the existence of two parallel and contemporaneous systems for Torah reading (whether pre- or post-70) would raise a number of intriguing questions: Why two customs? Did they always exist simultaneously? If not, which came rst, and why did the other develop? Fleischer, for example, has suggested that the dierence between the two practices is that the system of shorter readings (i.e., the triennial cycle) was adopted in places that had a more expansive Torah-related liturgy, i.e., sermons and targumim. The longer, annual, reading held sway where there were fewer concomitant activities. This is an interesting but highly speculative theory even for the later period (Fleischer, Annual and Triennial Torah Reading, 27). 92. On the recitation and study of Torah at Qumran, see 1Q 6, 68; Schiman, Early History of Public Reading of the Torah, 4546. 93. Every Good Man Is Free 8183. 94. Ibid., 7576; Hypothetica 11, 1; Josephus, War 2, 124.
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Similar to the Essene practice throughout Judaea is that of the Therapeutae in Egypt. As Jews likewise devoted to a life of piety, purity, and learning, they spent their Sabbaths studying scriptural readings.95 The same also may have been true of the Samaritans, but reliable contemporary sources are unavailable in this regard. Not until the third and fourth centuries c.e., with the communal and religious revival under Baba Rabba, do we have substantive material on which to base historical assessments. At that time, some Samaritans spent the entire day in the synagogue, where the reading and study of Scriptures had become a xed routine. If we assume, as appears likely, that Baba Rabba basically revived older customs rather than instituting totally new ones, then we may conjecture that such scriptural readings existed beforehand, perhaps as early as the rst centuries c.e. 96 This, however, is speculative. Regarding Samaritan practices, anything earlier than the third or fourth centuries c.e. becomes a matter of guesswork.97
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the Torah reading Jesus was handed a scroll containing the book of Isaiah. Later rabbinic literature assumes that the Prophetic readings were xed and usually related in some fashion to the Torah reading.101 Was this true even at this early stage? The impression from the above passage is that Jesus chose at least the particular passage to be read, and perhaps the book as well.102 Furthermore, the Prophetic reading seems to have consisted of only a few verses, and those quoted in Luke might indeed be indicative of the usual portion that was read.103 Nevertheless, it is clear from Luke that, at least in this case, it was the Prophetic readingand not that from the Torahthat determined the nature of the sermon subsequently delivered.104 It is impossible to say when these readings from the Prophets were introduced into synagogue worship. Since they followed and presumably related to the Torah portion,105 they would then have postdated the introduction of the Torah-reading liturgy that, as we have seen, was introduced in the third century b.c.e. at the latest. Abudraham (fourteenth century c.e.) dates the institution of the Prophetic reading to the time of Antiochus IVs persecutions.106 While this medieval source has little historical value in and of itself, the period singled out may, in fact, not be far o the mark. Both Ben Sira and II Maccabees already speak of books of the Prophets as sacred literature alongside the Torah.107 The Hasmonean erawith its many upheavals and dramatic political, military, social, and
101. B Megillah 29b: one that resembles it [i.e., the Torah reading]. For a suggestion regarding the relevance of Philonic writings for determining the haftarah cycle, see N. Cohen, Earliest Evidence, 22549. 102. Scholarly opinion is divided over the readers degree of freedom in this regard. Some opine that the selections were predetermined, others that the reader had autonomy in this matter, and still others that the book read from was chosen earlier but the choice of the exact passages was left to the reader. For a summary of such opinions, see Crockett, Luke IV: 1630 and the Jewish Lectionary Cycle, 2627. 103. Luke 4:1819. The Tosefta (Megillah 3, 18 [p. 358]) speaks of three, four, or ve verses for the haftarah. Amoraic sources expand this (in theory at least) to twenty-one verses; see Y Megillah 4, 2, 75a; B Megillah 23a. See also Tractate Soferim 13, 15 (pp. 25051); Bchler, Reading of the Law and Prophets, 7, 13. According to M Megillah 4, 24, the reading from the Prophets was to consist of at least three verses, the Torah reading itself of at least ten (on weekdays) or twenty-one (on Sabbaths). 104. It was this very idea that formed the basis of J. Manns monumental Bible as Read. Despite much criticism, this approach has been rened and nuanced in Bregman, Triennial Haftarot, 7484. Elbogen ( Jewish Liturgy, 143) suggests that the term haftarah refers to the end of the scriptural-reading segment of the liturgy, parallel to the term =( completion). It has also been suggested that the term means dismissed; this prophetic reading, along with its related homily, may have concluded the communal worship service. On the haftarah generally, see Perrot, La Lecture de la Bible, 17593; J. Mann, Bible as Read, I, 55560; S. Rappaport, Erech Millin, I, 32850; Schrer, History, II, 452, following Bacher, Exegetische Terminologie, II, 14. 105. B Megillah 29b: [one] that resembles it. 106. Siddur Abudraham (p. 172). On persecution as a factor in medieval (and modern) explanations of liturgical changes, see J. Mann, Changes in the Divine Service, 241302. 107. Ben Sira, Prologue; II Macc. 2, 13; 15, 9.
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religious developmentsgave rise to messianic expectations in certain circles as well as hopes of renewed grandeur; apocalyptic speculation ourished, and eschatological groups such as the Dead Sea sect combed the Prophets for contemporary allusions.108 The use of the prophetic corpusor variations of it, as the apocalyptic mode appears to beseems to have been widespread at the time, and it may well have been this climate that gave rise to such institutionalized recitations, even among non-apocalyptic groups.109
108. Schrer, History, II, 488.; M. Stone, Apocalyptic Literature, 383441. See also J. J. Collins, Apocalyptic Literature, 34570; idem, Jewish Apocalypses, 2159. On the Dead Sea sect, see Dimant, Qumran Sectarian Literature, 51422. 109. See P. R. Davies, Scribes and Schools, 12225. 110. Moses 2, 21516.
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Philo also addresses the procedures and educational-religious goals of these gatherings, each of which might last for some time:
And indeed they do always assemble and sit together, most of them in silence except when it is the practice to add something to signify approval of what is read. But some priest who is present or one of the elders reads the holy laws to them and expounds them point by point till about the late afternoon, when they depart, having gained both expert knowledge of the holy laws and considerable advance in piety.112
Clearly, the instruction accompanying the reading of Scriptures was the main focus, lasting, according to Philo, almost the entire day. In contrast to the episodes recorded in the New Testament, where the preacher is described as having spoken spontaneously, here Philo talks about a priest (), elder (), or leader () who fullled this function. The goals of such expositionsthe acquisition of moral principles, a knowledge of the laws, and pietyare singled out.113 Josephus also attests to a similar devotion to study when quoting a speech of Nicolaus of Damascus delivered to Marcus Agrippa on behalf of Ionian Jewry. In an attempt to explain certain Jewish customs viewed unfavorably by their neighbors, Nicolaus proclaims: There is nothing hostile to mankind in our customs, but they are all pious and consecrated with saving righteousness. Nor do we make a secret of the precepts that we use as guides in religion and in human relations; we give every seventh day over to the study of our customs and law, for we think it necessary to occupy ourselves, as with any other study, so with these through which we can avoid committing sins. 114 The statements of Philo and Josephus indeed should not be taken as evidence of what happened in all synagogues in their day, neither in Alexandria nor elsewhere. The nature and extent of biblical exposition on any given Sabbath undoubtedly varied from place to place. The educational bent of Galilean villagers or of Jews from the Egyptian chora was undoubtedly much less than that of the Essenes, Therapeutae, or Alexandrian intellectuals, whose entire Sabbath might have been spent in either self-study or communal study.115
111. Special Laws 2, 6264. 112. Hypothetica 7, 13. 113. For comparative material from the Greco-Roman world, see Malherbe, Moral Exhortation. Note should be taken of A. Kashers suggestion (Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 211) that much of Philos description and a good part of Egyptian synagogue practice derived from the memories and traditions surrounding the ceremony that concluded the translation of the Torah into Greek centuries earlier, an event of major historical and religious importance to that Jewish community. 114. Antiquities 16, 4243. 115. On the philosophizing aspect of ancient Judaism, see Mason, Greco-Roman, Jewish, and Christian Philosophies, 1218; on the study dimension as crucial to the Qumran sects self-identity, see
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Nevertheless, what is clear is that in some places, and probably not only in certain Alexandrian circles, Sabbath morning worship developed into a serious learning session. For the ordinary Jew who attended Sabbath worship, however, this kind of rigor seems most improbable. The element of study in the typical synagogue was undoubtedly much more curtailed in scope.
Sermons
The New Testament evidence makes it crystal clear that the sermon (i.e., the exposition of an idea that appears in the scriptural reading) was a recognized component of the Sabbath service. Jesus preached in Nazareth, as did Paul in Antioch in Pisidia.116 As noted above, Philo has left us several descriptions of communal Sabbath observances among at least some Alexandrian Jews, and on each occasion he focuses on the sermon or exposition of the Torah. The focus of Sabbath worship for the Therapeutae of Egypt was a sermon delivered by their leader and teacher. Philo oers a brief description of the setting,117 although he avoids touching upon the contents of these homilies. Nevertheless, given the fact that members of this community spent the entire week studying Scriptures individually, there can be little doubt that the Sabbath sermon dealt with matters pertaining to their studies. Philo has the following to say: Then the senior among them, who also has the fullest knowledge of the doctrines which they profess, comes forward and with visage and voice both quiet and composed gives a well-reasoned and wise discourse. He does not make an exhibition of clever rhetoric like the orators or sophists of today but follows careful examination by careful expression of the exact meaning of the thoughts, and this does not lodge just outside the ears of the audience but passes through the hearing into the soul and there stays securely. All the others sit still and listen, showing their approval merely by their looks or nods. 118 The sermon or exposition of scriptural readings became central to Jewish worship in Egypt and elsewherein the rst century and appears to be reected in an interesting remark made by Josephus when recounting the story of the translation of the Torah into Greek. The Letter of Aristeas (3058) reports that its focus was a festive reading of Scriptures; Josephus remarks that the text was also explained by the elders (as in a sermon?) for the benet of those assembled.119
Fraade, Interpretive Authority, 5169; on the intellectual climate of Alexandria at this time, see H. A. Wolfson, Philo, I, 5586; Mendelson, Secular Education in Philo, 8184. 116. Luke 4:2021 and Acts 13:15, respectively. 117. Contemplative Life 28. 118. Ibid., 31. Interestingly, this scenario took place in the sects sanctuary (), in which there was a strict separation of men and women (ibid., 3233). The term likewise referred to individual cells used by members of the sect during the week (ibid., 25). See Daniel-Nataf, PhiloWritings, 188 n. 25. 119. Letter of Aristeas 3058; Antiquities 12, 1078.
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We have no way of knowing for certain the forms and styles of rhetoric used by preachers in the rst century. On the basis of later analogies, and assuming that some speeches in rst-century sources may derive fromor were at least inuenced bya synagogue setting, various suggestions have been proposed. Some have assumed that IV Maccabees is, in fact, a series of synagogue sermons, that Philos questions and answers originated in a synagogue setting, or that the speeches in Acts are testimony to Hellenistic Jewish sermonic patterns and presage later homiletical ones.120 All such hypotheses, however intriguing, remain inconclusive. In conclusion, let us comment on several other aspects of the sermon. From the accounts concerning Jesus and Paul, it is clear that the sermon probably followed the Prophetic reading and related to it. This would seem to have been the norm with oppositional, messianically oriented groups, such as early Christians and members of the Qumran sect. The books of the Prophets lent themselves to revolutionary messages, be they of a political, social, or religious nature. More mainstream synagogues undoubtedly focused (though by no means exclusively) on the Torah reading itself, as per Philo and Josephus, but we have no information in this regard.121 Later synagogue sermons often preceded the scriptural readings, but this type of sermon remains unattested for the rst century. However, it is safe to assume that whenever a sermon preceded the readings, it invariably related to, and prepared the way for, the Torah reading itself, as was the case in Late Antiquity. Even within the limited material at our disposal, we nd contrasting practices with regard to the location of the preacher in the synagogue when delivering his sermon. Luke describes Jesus as sitting when he preached; Paul stood.122 Might this reect a change in the position of the preacher between the early and mid rst century? Or perhaps this marked a dierence in practices of delivery between Judaea and the Diaspora? While certitude in this matter is elusive, neither of these options is compelling. Indeed, we may simply have two alternate practices with no geographical or chronological implications. This last possibility nds some conrmation in the fact that, subsequently, we nd both practices in use within synagogue settings.123
120. IV Maccabees: Freudenthal, Die Flavius Josephus beigelegte Schrift; see also Siegert, Drei hellenistischjdische Predigten, II. Philo: Runia, Structure of Philos Allegorical Treatises, 230; idem, Further Observations, 107, 112; and H. A. Wolfson, Philo, I, 9596. Acts: Wills, Form of the Sermon, 27799; C. C. Black II, Rhetorical Form of the Sermon, 118; Bowker, Speeches in Acts, 96111. 121. Hengel (Scriptures and Their Interpretation, 159) has estimated that 96% of Philos quotations come from the Torah, an emphasis characteristic of other Jewish-Hellenistic writings as well. If there is a correlation between Philos writings and his synagogue sermons, then the centrality of the Torah for sermonic material is clearly established, in his case at least. 122. Luke 4:20 and Acts 14:1416, respectively. 123. See below, Chap. 16.
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Targumim
Another activity that seems to have accompanied the Torah reading was the recitation of a targum. It is generally assumed that the custom of translating Scriptures into the vernacular at the synagogue service already existed in the Second Temple period.124 Given the widespread usage of Aramaic throughout the Near East from the Persian period onward, and the concomitant fact that this language was used in books, ocial documents, personal names, and the speech of Jews in the late Second Temple period, it is not at all surprising that there was a need to make the reading and study of Scriptures accessible to the people at large.125 This phenomenon was preceded by similar, though far more accelerated, developments within the Jewish communities of Greek-speaking countries during the Hellenistic and early Roman periods. It was in Egypt, in the wake of the largescale settlement of Jews there, that the Torah was soon translated into Greek, and then closely followed by the translation of other biblical books.126 It is possible, however, that targum was unnecessary in many, if not most, places in the Roman Diaspora, as the readings themselves may have been in the vernacular. This is far from certain, and the Septuagint translation (or variations thereof ) may have been used after the Hebrew reading, parallel to the Aramaic targum practice in Judaea.127 It is impossible to assess when Aramaic targumim rst made their appearance, although both G. F. Moore and R. Bloch have suggested dates in the early Second Temple period.128
124. See the introductory remarks on the subject in McNamara, Palestinian Judaism and the New Testament, 1789, 171210; le Daut, Introduction la littrature targumique; Alexander, Jewish Aramaic Translations, 24250; Grossfeld, Targum Onqelos, 24146; S. A. Kaufman, Dating the Language of the Palestinian Targums, 12930; Wilcox, Aramaic Background, 36278. See, however, Z. Safrai (Origins of Reading the Aramaic Targum, 18793), who, following rabbinic evidence closely, dates this practice to the second century c.e. 125. Rabin, Hebrew and Aramaic, 100739 and the extensive bibliography there; Fitzmyer, Languages of Palestine, 50131; Schrer, History, II, 20 n. 68 and bibliography cited there; McNamara, Palestinian Judaism and the New Testament, 5468. 126. The Jews of Alexandria, at least, viewed their translation as divinely inspired, celebrating the anniversary of its completion with an imposing public ceremony (Letter of Aristeas 310; Philo, Moses 2, 4142; Antiquities 12, 1078). 127. See generally on this issue Perrot, La lecture de la Bible dans la diaspora hellnistique, 118 21. On Greek in Diaspora liturgy, see Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, I, 284; Schrer, History, III, 14042; Tcherikover, Prolegomenon, 3032; van der Horst, Neglected Greek Evidence, 27796. On the suggestion that the various Greek versions of the Septuagint are, in fact, Greek targumim, see Kahle, Cairo Geniza, 21314; Modrzejewski, Jews of Egypt, 100101. Cf., however, the objections raised in Wevers, Barthlemy and Proto-Septuagint Studies, 5877. This may have been the case in certain locales in Judaea as well, even in the pre-70 era. 128. See G. F. Moore ( Judaism, I, 3023), who suggests that such translations may have been coterminus with the scriptural reading itself. R. Bloch (Methodological Note, 6061) opines that the targum genre is much closer to the Midrash. . . . It is even probable that it originally was a homiletic midrash, or simply a series of homilies on Scripture, read in the synagogue after the public reading of the Torah.
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The diculty is that all extant manuscripts of the targumim (Onqelos, Targum Jonathan of the Prophets, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, Neoti, Genizah fragments, etc.) derive from anytime between the seventh and the sixteenth centuries c.e. 129 Moreover, there is evidence of late interpolation, such as the oft-quoted reference to Muhammads wife and daughter (Targum Pseudo-Jonathan of Gen. 21:21), the mention of Constantinople (ibid., of Num. 24:24), and reference to the six orders of the Mishnah (ibid., of Exod. 26:9). Given the presence of clearly late material, why should one assume the antiquity of the targum genre at all? The response to this is fourfold. (1) We have evidence of written targumim for the pre-70 period. Fragments of an Aramaic targum of Leviticus (4Q tgLev) and Job (11Q tgJob; 4Q tgJob) have been found at Qumran; and rabbinic literature as well makes reference to a targum of Job found in the time of Rabban Gamaliel II, at the turn of the second century.130 This last source also cites an earlier tradition that a fragment of the targum of Job was found in the days of Rabban Gamaliel the Elder (ourished ca. 2545 c.e.) during repair (or reconstruction) work on the Temple Mount.131 (2) Over the last century, many studies have compared targumic traditions with those found in Josephus, the writings of the Qumran sect, the Septuagint, apocryphal literature, the New Testament, and rabbinic literature.132 The similarities are often striking and have led some scholars to the conclusion that certain targum traditions date to the same (i.e., the late Second Temple) period as well. (3) Various studiesfocusing especially on the targumim, on the one hand, and on Qumran Aramaic, on the otherhave demonstrated linguistic anities between these
129. Kahle, Masoreten des Westens, II, 3. For an overall introduction to targumic studies, see McNamara, New Testament and Palestinian Targum, 537. See also M. Black, Aramaic Studies and the Language of Jesus, 1728. 130. T Shabbat 13, 2 (p. 57) and parallels in Y Shabbat 16, 1, 15c; B Shabbat 115a; and Tractate Soferim 5, 17 (p. 161). See also comments by Lieberman, TK, III, 2034; and Sokolo, Targum to Job. 131. Sokolo, Targum to Job. Rabbinic claims to the antiquity of targum in the days of Ezra (e.g., B Megillah 3b; B Nedarim 37b; B Sanhedrin 21b) are not a serious factor in this debate. 132. Josephus: see references in McNamara, New Testament and the Palestinian Targum, 269. In the classic work of S. Rappaport (Agada und Exegese, xxxxii), the author discusses the many parallels between rabbinic tradition and Josephus, suggesting that an early written Aramaic targum stood behind both. Qumran sect: A number of scholars have pointed out the anities between the targum genre and other Qumran writings, i.e., the pesher commentariesespecially Habbakukand the Genesis Apocryphon. See, for example, Vermes, A propos des commentaires bibliques, 95103; Brownlee, Habakkuk Midrash and Targum of Jonathan, 16986; Wieder, Habakkuk Scroll and the Targum, 1418; Lehmann, 1 Q Genesis Apocryphon, 25152; Fitzmyer, Genesis Apocryphon, 2634. Septuagint: already suggested in Z. Frankel, Vorstudien zur der Septuaginta, 18591; idem, ber den Einuss der Palstinischen Exegese, 81, followed by Churgin, Targum and the Septuagint, 4165. Apocrypha: Marmorstein, Studien zum Pseudo-Jonathan Targum. New Testament: McNamara, New Testament and the Palestinian Targum, 70.; idem, Palestinian Judaism and the New Testament, 91169; Wilcox, Aramaic Background, 377. Rabbinic literature: McNamara, Some Early Rabbinic Citations, 115.
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dierent types of literature.133 To explain such ties, a common historical setting is both logical and justiable. (4) The targum as an integral part of the synagogue liturgy was well known in Late Antiquity. Detailed laws relating to this practice, as well as accounts of people who functioned in the capacity of delivering the targum, along with the translations and interpretations on such occasions, abound in the rabbinic sources.134 Even second-century authorities were already well aware of this practice, and many regulations associated with it are discussed in this contemporary literature.135 It seems that tannaitic sages were not initiating a new practice in this regard, but rather commenting upon, critiquing, and dening (for themselves? for others?) the existing institution. Thus, it is quite likely that the use of targum goes back at least to the late Second Temple period. Moreover, the reference in Targum Jonathan to the Hasmonean ruler John Hyrcanus is often cited as proof of the existence of early material.136 On the basis of the above considerations, it is clear that the targumic compilations are multilayered with material from dierent periods; the editing process continued over centuries throughout Late Antiquity and beyond, into the early Middle Ages. Much material was added and adapted over time, although a few traditions may possibly be early, deriving from the rst century c.e., if not beforehand.137 While dierences among scholars still exist regarding how much early material is embedded in the targumim, there is a consensus that the targumim already existed in the rst century c.e. in both written and oral form,138 and that an Aramaic targum of Job found on the Temple Mount would indicate that other such works of the Torah and the Prophets were undoubtedly also in circu133. See Diez-Macho, Recently Discovered Palestinian Targum, 60. For a suggestion that a priestly legacy informed later Palestinian targumim, see Flesher, Literary Legacy, 467508. 134. See below, Chaps. 13 and 16. 135. For example, T Megillah 3, 3141 (pp. 36264). 136. The historical reference to the Hasmonean John Hyrcanus is from Targum Jonathan of Deut. 33:11. 137. See Schrer, History, I, 99114; Kahle, Cairo Geniza, 191208; McNamara, New Testament and the Palestinian Targum; idem, Palestinian Judaism and the New Testament; Diez-Macho, Recently Discovered Palestinian Targum, 60. See also Alexander, Targumim and Early Exegesis, 6071; Bowker, Targums and Rabbinic Literature; Bengtsson, Passover, 2131; and above, note 124. 138. See, for example, in this regard the statement by Goshen-Gottstein, Aspects of Targum Studies, 36: I am afraid that in spite of the Qumran material of targumic character and more sophisticated approaches in Aramaic dialectology, the gap between dicta on targumic origins and extant Targumim remains unbridged. It is one thing to talk about Targum as an institution, possibly hailing back to the early times of the Second Templei.e., its prehistory being shrouded in the general traditions about the Men of the Great Assembly. It is another to analyse actual Targumim. More than ever we are aware that the institution in the abstract and exegetical traditions must not be mixed up with an actual protoformulation in literary standard Aramaic, say rst-century b.c.e., even less so with the nal xation of the text on Babylonian soil, four centuries later. If we have learned anything in the past quarter of a century it is this: we may at best connect isolated exegetical traditions; we can never overcome a gap of eight centuries.
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lation, and not only at Qumran. Moreover, much of the material in the extant targumim originated in the synagogue setting.139 While some traditions may have originated in a later, literary (bet midrash), context, others are quite dierent in both form and content 140 and may have come from a more popular synagogal Sitz im Leben. Thus, we are left with both certitude and perplexity. Targumim were in use in the rst century,141 and most probably (though by no means exclusively) in a synagogue setting. However, the content of these targumim, how they were delivered, how literal or exible their renditions were, and, more importantly, what ideological viewpoints they promoted are all issues that, for the present, must remain unanswered.
Communal Prayer
The most problematic component of synagogue worship in the Second Temple period is that of communal prayer. On the one hand, private prayer was a well-known phenomenon in biblical and Second Temple times;142 on the other, it is universally acknowledged that steps were taken within rabbinic circles at Yavneh soon after the destruction of the Temple to institutionalize communal prayer.143 The question today, however, is whether communal prayer as a regular and obligatory worship framework already existed in the pre-70 era and, if so, to what degree. For the most part, discussion in this regard has focused on the Shemoneh Esreh or Amidah, the central prayer in Jewish liturgy. Over the last century and more, there has been a general consensus that the activity of Rabban Gamaliel and his colleagues in Yavneh was one of editing and organizing an already extant public prayer. Scholars dier on the degree of editing involved, from a minimalist position of touching up or lightly editing an already existing version to a position advocating a serious reworking of earlier materials by the Yavnean sages.144
139. See R. Kasher, Aramaic Targumim and Their Sitz im Leben, 7585; York, Targum in the Synagogue and the School, 7486. 140. York, Targum in the Synagogue and the School. See Shinan, Aggadah of the Palestinian Targums, 20317. 141. For a more cautious approach regarding the early dating of targumic traditions, see York, Dating of Targumic Literature, 4962; Grabbe, Jannes/Jambres Tradition, 393401; as well as the more general critiques in S. A. Kaufman, On Methodology in the Study of the Targums, 11724; idem, Dating the Language of the Palestinian Targums, 11841. 142. M. Greenberg, On the Renement of the Conception of Prayer, 5792; idem, Biblical Prose Prayer; idem, Tella, cols. 896922; Kaufmann, Religion of Israel, 16061, 36667; Weinfeld, Deuteronomy, 3245. See also Johnson, Prayer in the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha; Flusser, Psalms, Hymns and Prayers, 55177; Charlesworth, Prolegomenon, 26585; idem, Jewish Hymns, Odes and Prayers, 411 36. 143. See B Berakhot 27b28b; B Megillah 17b18a; Heinemann, Prayer, 1336; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 195203; G. F. Moore, Judaism, I, 292. 144. See the range of positions, from, for example, the minimalist position of N. Cohen (Nature of
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Many have attempted to determine the earliest versions of the Amidah, usually by focusing on sources that purportedly preserve embryonic forms of this prayer. A unilinear view of the development of Jewish prayer was once axiomatic among scholars, and attempts have frequently been made to trace the evolution of this prayers urtext. Its layers have been attributed to various historical contexts, ranging from the Persian period to the post-70, Yavnean, era.145 Earlier traces of the Amidah were supposedly detected in a wide range of sources: Nehemiah, Psalms, Ben Sira, the Psalms of Solomon, and the Dead Sea Scrolls.146 Bickerman went a step further, suggesting that many of the Amidahs formulations, rst appearing in Ben Sira, were subsequently incorporated into a civic prayer of Jerusalem and were nally adopted and adapted by the Yavnean sages following the destruction.147 Common to all the above is the assumption that the Amidah crystallized as a communal prayer at some point in the late Second Temple period. Even the pioneering study of Heinemann, which posited a multiplicity of orally transmitted forms at this stage, assumed that the basic outlines of the Amidah prayer (the number of blessings, their content, and order) had taken shape before 70.148 The work at Yavneh was thus one of editing and perhaps reformulation. Until recently, the lone dissenting voice to this consensus was that of Zeitlin. Decades ago, he argued that, in fact, no public prayer was known in Judaea in the pre-70 period and that the institution of communal prayer in the synagogue was a post-70 development.149 Of late, this line of argument has been adopted by me and, subsequently, by Fleischer and Reif.150 The case against the existence of institutionalized communal prayer in the Second Temple synagogue rests squarely on the evidence at hand (or lack thereof ) for communal Jewish prayer-worship in the pre-70 period. With all their diversity, extant sources are unanimous in this respect; as we have seen above, Philo, Josephus, the New Testament, the Theodotos inscription, and what appear to be early rabbinic traditions speak only of
Shimon Hapekulis Act, 54755) through the intermediary ones of Elbogen ( Jewish Liturgy, 2012) and Heinemann (Prayer, 13.) to the maximalist position of Zahavy (Studies in Jewish Prayer, 95101). 145. So, for example, Kohler, Origins of the Synagogue and the Church, 18., 206.; idem, Origin and Composition, 41025; Finkelstein, Development of the Amidah, 143, 12770. 146. Mirsky, Piyyut, 1829; Liebreich, Impact of Nehemiah 9:537, 22737; Liber, Structure and History, 35357; Marmorstein, Oldest Form of the Eighteen Benedictions, 13759; Lvi, Les dix-huit bndictions, 16178; and Weinfeld, Prayers for Knowledge, Repentance and Forgiveness, 186200; idem, Traces of Kedushat Yozer, 1526; idem, Morning Prayers in Qumran, 48194; Talmon, World of Qumran, 20043; idem, Manual of Benedictions, 475500; Flusser, Second Benediction, 33134. 147. Bickerman, Civic Prayer, 16385; idem, Jews in the Greek Age, 280. See also Baer (Israel among the Nations, 3236), who claimed that Greek prayers provided the model for the Amidah. 148. Heinemann, Prayer, 1336. 149. Zeitlin, Tellah, 20849 (= Studies, I, 92133). 150. L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 1920; Fleischer, On the Beginnings of Obligatory Jewish Prayer, 397425; Reif, Judaism and Hebrew Prayer, 4452, 8287.
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scriptural readings and sermons.151 None mentions public communal prayer. Moreover, the few extant buildings usually identied as synagogues would seem to indicate not only a range of plans and styles, but the lack of any discernible or distinctive orientation toward Jerusalem.152 The Judaean examples all focused on the center of the hall and had benches along the four walls. This is signicant, as it was the physical orientation of the devotee, i.e., facing Jerusalem, that was associated with prayer early on and with all prayer halls in Late Antiquity.153 Recently, Fleischer has pursued this line of reasoning to an extreme, arguing against the existence of any formal public prayer either in Second Temple Judaea or in the Diaspora.154 On the face of it, the basis for his argument would appear self-evident; the abovenoted written sources invariably speak of a Torah-reading ceremony and never of prayer. According to Fleischer, the evidence indicates that the Diaspora situation was much the same as that in Judaea, namely, that prayer was not yet a recognized communal form of worship. However, Fleischers claim is too radical and monolithic, leaving little room for the necessary diversity and nuances that characterized all aspects of rst-century synagogues. Regarding the Diaspora, the diculty with Fleischers claim rests primarily in the very name used for many Diaspora synagogues: proseuche, literally, house of prayer. On the basis of the name alone, it is rightfully assumed that prayer was a signicant element of Jewish worship in such places. Nevertheless, on the basis of the repeated references to Torah reading in Diaspora sources, Fleischer dismisses the prayer factor, claiming that the name proseuche was invoked by Diaspora Jews to ascribe a measure of sanctity to their institution, thereby asserting its inviolability in the face of pagan attack.155 However, to dismiss a name used for hundreds of years in a wide variety of geographical locales as being a kind of ruse to demonstrate self-condence and mislead the gentiles is most problematic. Non-Jews visited Diaspora synagogues in large numbers throughout the rst century c.e. and undoubtedly were familiar with what went on inside. To assume that the institution was called by a name that had nothing to do with what actually transpired therein is stretching credulity to the limit. Indeed, if Jews desired to create an aura of sanctity for their place of worship, many other terms were available (and some were,
151. It may be of signicance that Luke, who incorporates prayer pericopes more than any other gospel writer, speaks of prayer in the Temple and in private homesbut never in the synagogue. See Falk, Jewish Prayer Literature, 26976. 152. L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 1019. 153. See Dan. 6:11; and below, Chap. 9. 154. Fleischer, On the Beginnings of Obligatory Jewish Prayer, 402. and esp. 42425. Note, furthermore, Fleischers rather rigid denition of communal prayer (ibid., 401, 414, 426). 155. Ibid., 409. The argument, that the term proseuche was invoked to oer an extra measure of protection to the synagogue, seems to be undermined by the fact that it was used as early as the third and second centuries b.c.e., when Jewish life ourished in Hellenistic Egypt.
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in fact, used) that would have conveyed this message no less poignantly.156 Moreover, if Fleischer is correct, why is it that only some Diaspora communities invoked the term proseuche and not others? The Jews of Berenice apparently had no qualms about using the name amphitheater and later synagogue, nor did the Jews of Rome and Asia Minor about regularly using the term synagoge. Nevertheless, Fleischer has rightly pointed to a sharp discrepancy between the name proseuche, on the one hand, and the activities recorded in Diaspora sources as having transpired therein, on the other. The former emphasizes prayer, the latterreading the Torah. Perhaps an answer is to be sought not in denying the prayer dimension, but rather in seeking to explain why Diaspora writers singled out the Torah-reading ceremony specically as so central an activity. Several factors seem to have been involved. Firstly, the Torah service may indeed have been the primary focus of Jewish worship in the Diaspora, as it was in Judaea. Secondly, this part of the service was undoubtedly the most dramatic and participatory component of Jewish worship and thus the one most likely to be described. Thirdly, not only was the Torah reading important in its own right, but it also served as a focus around which most of the other liturgical elements revolved, i.e., the targum, sermon, and haftarah. Finally, and as noted above, the Torah-reading ceremony and its related components reected what was most unique and distinctive in the synagogue worship context, especially when compared to other religious institutions in the Greco-Roman world. In its religious dimension, the synagogue was fundamentally a place of study and instruction; since such an emphasis was sui generis in antiquity, it was only natural that ancient writers would highlight this aspect. Thus, precisely because of its centrality, ancient authors made use of the Torah-reading ceremony, each for his own purpose: the author of Acts, to set the stage for Pauls preaching to Jews and non-Jews; Philo, to expound on the didactic, philosophical, and moral lessons to which the Jews were exposed on the Sabbath; and rabbinic tradition, to describe a hall so huge and magnicent that the only way the congregation could respond was by the azzan waving kerchiefs. In sum, it would appear unwarranted to deny the existence of prayer as an integral part of Diaspora worship, although, admittedly, it was not the dominant element. The name proseuche, associated with many Diaspora institutions, is simply too telling to be summarily dismissed.157 Nevertheless, we have no way of determining the nature, composi156. For example, the synagogue could have been referred to as (holy place), as seems to have been the case on occasion; see Josephus, War 7, 45 (Antioch); III Macc. 2, 28 (Egypt). See also Josephus, Against Apion 1, 209 on Agatharchides reference to in Jerusalem; however, the reference here is undoubtedly to the Jerusalem Temple itself (despite the plural). 157. Moreover, it may be of more than passing interest that in the only Palestinian synagogue that Josephus refers to as a proseuche, namely, the one in Tiberias, the recitation of prayers is specically mentioned. However, in this case Josephus was speaking not of an ordinary Sabbath but of a fast day, which may explain the predominance of prayers there (Life 29095).
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tion, and extent of communal Jewish prayer in the Diaspora during the Second Temple period. Some have tried to identify specic compositions in extant Jewish and Christian literature that may have stemmed from a pre- or post-70 Diaspora proseuche setting.158 Such suggestions, however, remain tentative, at best.159 We have already oered several reasons as to why communal prayer played a more prominent role in Diaspora synagogues than in those of Judaea. The use of hymns and prayers was central to pagan religious frameworks, much more so than in the Jerusalem Temple, where silence accompanied the actual sacricial rite and only the levites provided a hymnal component.160 Thus, exposure to pagan forms may well have stimulated local Diaspora communities to imitate these practices in some way. Moreover, the distance from the Jerusalem Temple and its manifold ceremonies may have played a role as well. Diaspora communities perhaps felt a need to compensate for this remoteness by embellishing their own liturgy.161 In fact, the absence of (or in this case, the distance from) the Temple may have provided a powerful incentive to develop a prayer format, as happened at Qumran and in the post-70 era (see below). If, then, Torah reading was indeed the dominant activity, even in the proseuche setting, why did so many of these communities choose the term proseuche to designate their communal building? As noted some time ago 162and Fleischer has reemphasized this point as wellit is reasonable to assume that the name proseuche bestowed an aura of holiness and sanctity on these Diaspora institutions. Given their minority status and the distance from the Jerusalem Temple, Diaspora Jews might well have desired to enhance their local institutions with this additional religious dimensionin name as well as in fact. On the Judaean scene, the issue of communal prayer fares dierently and requires a
158. Letter of Aristeas 305. See A. Kasher (Synagogues as Houses of Prayer and Holy Places, 211), who claims that the story provided an important paradigm for imitation. See also Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, II, 67197; idem, Jewish Hymns, Odes and Prayers, 41136. See also Flusser, Psalms, Hymns and Prayers; Fiensy, Prayers Alleged to Be Jewish; idem, Hellenistic Synagogal Prayers, 1727. 159. The one possible example of a prayer from a proseuche setting may be preserved in the famous Nash papyrus from second-century b.c.e. Egypt. The prayers listed there (the Ten Commandments and the Shema) possibly reect Hebrew prayers current in at least some Egyptian proseuchai, but there is no way to prove this. See below, Chap. 16, note 87, as well as Albright, Biblical Fragment, 1539; Fraser, Ptolemaic Alexandria, II, 443 n. 777; Bickerman, Jews in the Greek Age, 86. Cf. Lacheman, Matter of Method, 1539. See also Liber Antiquitatum Biblicarum 11, 8: Take care to sanctify the Sabbath day . . . to praise the Lord in the assembly of the elders and to glorify the Mighty One in the council of the older men. 160. Pagan ritual: MacMullen, Paganism, 16, 44. Temple ritual: for example, Letter of Aristeas 92, 95. For diering interpretations of the reason for the silence in Jerusalems two Temples, see Kaufmann, Religion of Israel, 3014; Knohl, Sanctuary of Silence, 14852; idem, Between Voice and Silence, 1730. 161. Hengel, Proseuche und Synagoge, 3335. 162. L. Levine, Second Temple Synagogue, 22.
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nuanced approach. While there is no evidence for communal prayers in the typical Judaean synagogue,163 prayers settings did, in fact, exist in certain cases. It is clear from literary sources and from the Qumran scrolls that the Essenes and related groups conducted regular communal prayer sessions. Moreover, there is some indication that certain prayers found in the scrolls may have originated before Qumran was established, among groups with which the sect had anities.164 The Essenes throughout Judaea, according to Philo, would gather in their own synagogues for regular worship, and at Qumran a is mentioned as the setting for worship services.165 It is understandable that a group that consciously distanced itself from Jewish society generally, and from the Temple specically, might nd it necessary to develop an alternate religious mode (i.e., prayer) as its primary form of worship. The ecacy and validity of the sacricial cult in Jerusalem being denied by this sect, substitute worship elements were introduced.166 In addition, priests ociating in the Temple held prayer services every morning; many elements of this liturgy found their way into later normative Jewish prayer. The Mishnah records the following: The appointed [ocial] said to them: Recite one blessing. And they blessed and read the Ten Commandments, the Shema [Deut. 6:49], If, then, you obey [ibid., 11:1321], And He spoke [Num. 15:3741]. They blessed the people with three blessings: True and certain, Temple sacrice [Avodah], and the priestly blessing. On the Sabbath, they would add a blessing for the departing priestly course. 167 We also nd hints of group prayer among the rst-century Pharisees. Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai are said to have disputed the precise number of blessings to be recited on holidays and Rosh Hashanah that fell on the Sabbath. In the context of that discussion, the Tosefta refers to a specic incident that took place in the presence of the elders of Bet Shammai and oni Haqatan.168 Acts speaks of ninth-hour prayers in the Temple; other occasionspublic and private,
163. Ibid., 1920. 164. See Chazon, Prayers from Qumran, 27173; idem, On the Special Character of Sabbath Prayer, 121; Knohl, Between Voice and Silence, 30. 165. Judaea: Philo, Contemplative Life 8183. Qumran: CD 11, 21; Talmon, World of Qumran, 24142; Steudel, Houses of Prostration, 4968; Chazon, On the Special Character of Sabbath Prayer, 121; and above, Chap. 3. 166. According to Talmon (World of Qumran, 2026, 237.), Qumran was inuenced by biblical verses stressing the importance of prayer, while its communal prayer stemmed from the commune ideology and corporate personality of the sect. 167. M Tamid 5, 1. See comments of Zeitlin, Morning Benediction and the Readings in the Temple, 33036; Hammer, What Did They Bless? 30524; Kimelman, Shema and Its Rhetoric, 13543; and below, Chap. 16. In the case of this Temple prayer as well, Fleischer attempts to neutralize the evidence of communal prayer by assuming that this tradition is anachronistic (On the Beginnings of Obligatory Jewish Prayer, 41415, 41924). For a recent suggestion that the recitation of the Shema was rst introduced in the Hasmonean era, see A. Baumgarten, Invented Traditions, 2029. 168. T Rosh Hashanah 2, 17 (pp. 32021); and below, Chap. 16.
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daily, and holidaysare mentioned in a variety of sources.169 The evidence in Matthew for prayer in the synagogue and on street corners is equivocal: And when you pray, you must not be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the streetcorners, that they may be seen. 170 It would appear that Matthew was not being critical of communal prayer in synagogues, but of the ostentatious display of piety by individuals; he was advocating devotions in private prayer, and not demonstrative prayer in public, which he associates with hypocrites. Nevertheless, it is quite possible that some blessings were recited in synagogues in Judaea as well as in the Diaspora. Although only nding expression in the Mishnah and Tosefta, blessings before and after the Torah reading may have already been a customary practice in the rst century.171 In addition to the Torah blessings, there is some evidence that the priestly benediction was recited in pre-70 synagogues. The Mishnah records the following: In the province it was pronounced as three blessings, but in the Temple as a single blessing; in the Temple they [i.e., the priests] pronounced the Name as it was written, but in the province by substituted terms; in the province the priests raised their hands only as high as their shoulders, but in the Temple above their heads, except for the High Priest who raised his hands only as high as the frontlet. 172 According to this tradition, the priestly blessing was recited not only in the Temple itself,173 but also outside Jerusalem. The term used in this last regard is somewhat vague; in juxtaposition with the Temple, this tradition speaks of outlying areas ( )or, in a parallel version, borders ( 471.)This source, however, poses a number of questions. Can we regard it as historically reliable, and, if so, to which communal framework does it refer? Assuming a modicum of credibility for this tradition does not appear entirely unwarranted, and it would seem that the synagogue is the venue being discussed. What is not at all clear, however, is whether the two practices noted as having taken place in the Temple and synagogue were contemporaneous. Were there similar rituals being conducted simultaneously in the Temple and synagogue, or does this tradition in reality compare pre-70 Temple practice with that of the post-70 synagogue? The answer is not clear. Only by assuming the former alternative can we posit the recitation of priestly blessings in the Second Temple synagogue. However, since this mishnaic pericope may well derive from the Ushan era (ca. 140180 c.e.), some three generations after the Temples destruc169. Acts 3:1; Falk, Jewish Prayer Literature, 28598. See the interesting though problematic tradition in T Sukkah 4, 5 (p. 273); and comments in Lieberman, TK, IV, 88889; and above, Chap. 3. 170. Matt. 6:5; McKay, Sabbath and Synagogue, 172. 171. M Megillah 4, 2; T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273). 172. M Sotah 7, 6. See also M Tamid 7, 2. 173. M Tamid 5, 1. 174. Sifre Zuta 6, 27 (p. 250). On as outlying areas, see B Berakhot 12a.
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tion, it is very possible that the comparison being made is between pre-70 Temple practice and that of contemporary synagogues, with which these early sages were familiar.175 Thus, we may conclude that the place of prayer in the Second Temple synagogue in Judaea varied considerably. Prayer appears to have played little or no role in the typical Judaean synagogue.176 Whether some places distant from Jerusalem (e.g., in the Galilee) may have introduced this component in some limited fashion is a moot issue. There was a short, xed morning prayer service for ociating priests in the Temple but, interestingly enough, this framework was separate from their sacricial routine.177 The various sects seem to have developed communal prayer patterns; evidence regarding Qumran, the Essenes, and the Therapeutae is clear-cut thanks to the Dead Sea scrolls, Josephus, and Philo. Moreover, there is some indication that the Pharisees knew of a xed prayer mode (possibly communal), at least on holidays. Outside Judaea, however, the prayer component seems to have been considerably more developed, although, unfortunately, we are in no position to determine its nature, form, or content.
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of them. This is most reminiscent of Philos claim that tributes of shields, gilded crowns, slabs, and inscriptions to the emperor were found in Alexandrian proseuchai.178 Notwithstanding, the religious component indeed played a part in synagogal activity. There is no question that it was an important element, although the degree of its priority may have varied from place to place. The religious aspect was but one of many functions that transpired in this institution. Thus, the synagogue was a communal institution par excellence, and indeed the only one of its kind attested in either Judaea or the Diaspora throughout antiquity. The proclivity among many scholars today to describe the synagogue in religious terms derives not only from our own associations with contemporary synagogues as religious institutions, but also from the fact that ancient literary sources tend to refer to the synagogue in religious terms. Despite this emphasis, while it was the communal feature that characterized the synagogue in the rst century c.e., its religious component gradually gained in importance in Late Antiquity until it eventually dominated the prole of this institution. In Judaea, this process commenced after the destruction of the Temple. The situation in the Diaspora was somewhat dierent, as the synagogues religious and sacred character was discernible even before 70 c.e. For a few of these institutions, a term indicating holiness is used, and some are said to have contained holy objects or to have held sacred activities (e.g., meals, books, monies for the Temple and community, etc.). True enough, Philo also attributes sanctity to Essene synagogues of Judaea, but if the accuracy of this characterization (as against its being the projection of a Diaspora writer) is admitted, it could still be claimed that, in this respect as in many others, the Essenes did not reect the more general Judaean practice. In the course of our discussions of the Second Temple synagogue, we have noted that in a number of areas a phenomenon appeared in the Diaspora before it did in Judaea. There are three salient examples of this chronological priority. The rst is the very existence of the institution; as noted, the earliest evidence for a synagogue appears in Hellenistic Egypt, several centuries before a comparable evidence surfaced in Judaea. A second example has to do with the appearance of regular public prayer, again attested in Ptolemaic Egypt earlier than in Judaea. Thirdly, the evidence that exists regarding synagogue sanctity derives almost exclusively from the Diaspora. Since all of the above examples are documented for Egypt, a logical conclusion might be to assume that all were initially a product of that Diaspora community.179 Let us examine this claim of Diaspora precedence, item by item. The evidence for the existence of the synagogue clearly speaks for itself. The proseuche rst appeared in Egypt, and thus many scholars have followed this evidence and concluded that it is, in fact, a
178. Embassy 133. 179. Maoz raises an interesting though highly speculative suggestion that the Judaean synagogue was inuenced by contemporary Alexandrian architecture (Synagogue in the Second Temple Period, 512).
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Diaspora creation.180 However, there are very basic methodological issues at stake here that require consideration. Are these data indicative of the institutions very beginning or are they merely fortuitous in their preservation? Moreover, given the fact that the evidence relating to synagogues before the rst century c.e. is so sparse, how much weight should be accorded to the rst appearance of this phenomenon? Or, to phrase this issue dierently, does the absence of data necessarily mean that something did not exist? Caution is especially required since we are dealing with material from Egypt, where much more material has been preserved than elsewhere because of the countrys unusually dry climate. Finally, when the synagogue does begin to appear in other locales in the rstcentury b.c.e. (e.g., Delos, Cyrene, and Asia Minor), it is depicted as a well-established and universal institution that had already acquired a status and centrality in the eyes of both the Roman authorities and Jewish communities throughout the Empire. Clearly, its history has considerable roots, whether we think in terms of decades or, more likely, in terms of centuries. If the above-noted lines of reasoning are valid and the evidence that Egypt was necessarily the cradle of the synagogue for the Diaspora may not be foolproof, could this be argued for Judaea as well, i.e., that the synagogue evolved there independent of the Diaspora? The situation is somewhat dierent with regard to communal prayer. The widespread Diaspora use of the term proseuche (as against the Judaean synagoge) clearly indicates that there was a substantive dierence in liturgy between the two geographical areas. While the Temple stood, Judaean communities seem to have limited their liturgical expression to the cluster of activities that accompanied the Torah-reading ceremony. Outside of Judaeafar from the dominance (psychological as well as physical and political) of the Temple, and perhaps stimulated (or challenged) by their surroundingsmany Jewish communities developed prayer and even emphasized its importance by naming their communal institution accordingly. Whatever factors lie behind this development, it is important to bear in mind that not all Diaspora communities necessarily moved in this direction. Many did not use the term proseuche but preferred synagoge or some other term; thus, there is no compelling reason to assume that, in light of the many dierences between these institutions, prayer necessarily played a central role everywhere. It should be noted that clear and explicit statements regarding sanctity are rare. Those who tend to generalize regarding the extent of this phenomenon rely, in many cases, on shaky evidence that requires substantiation. Only with regard to Antioch (where the Jeru180. Hengels pioneering study was the rst serious attempt to establish this claim (Proseuche und Synagoge, 15784); later on, this line of reasoning was developed by Dion, who demonstrated how indebted the Egyptian proseuche was to Egyptian temple models (Synagogues et temples, 4575). An even more revolutionary thesis was put forth by Griths (Egypt and the Rise of the Synagogue, 115), who sought the Egyptian roots of the proseuche in the Per Ankh, which was associated with local temples. For a critique of this theory, see my First-Century Synagogue.
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salem Temple vessels were deposited, having been appropriated by Antiochus IV during the period of his persecutions) is there some basis for assuming that the word hieron (holy place) reects a historical reality. Several other terms (e.g., a sacred precinct or grove) that may imply a buildings sanctity refer to a number of Egyptian Jewish locales, and III Maccabees associates a proseuche with the holy commemoration of the local communitys salvation.181 Admittedly, use of the term proseuche may indicate a degree of holiness, and the references in Roman edicts to sacred meals, sacred books, and sacred funds are all presumably to be associated with the synagogue. It is not clear, however, how much the presence of these objects or activities in the building, or even the name proseuche, may actually reect, or contribute, to the sanctity of the place. This having been said, it is nevertheless clear that the element of sanctity indeed played a role in some Diaspora synagogues, whereas this was rarely, if ever, the case in contemporary Judaea. Here, too, as in the case of prayer, it is undoubtedly the social and religious contexts of Diaspora communities that contributed greatly to this development. In summary, the claim that the Diaspora pioneered in various matters relating to the synagogue is complex. There is no one simple answer, armative or negative, and each case must be judged on its own merits. The claim that the very existence of synagogues was based on an Egyptian model is most problematic, resting, as it does, on slim evidence. As for communal prayer and sanctity, the evidence is quite conclusive; the Diaspora, or at least parts of it, did take the lead. Whether or not this inuenced Judaea is another issue; in these two realms, the development there was much later and under very dierent historical circumstances (see below). In previous chapters, we noted the extensive diversity among rst-century synagogues in Judaea and the Diaspora that stemmed from diering regional contexts and local inuences, as evidenced in both the physical remains of synagogues (Delos, Gamla, and Masada) and its various names (proseuche, synagoge, didaskaleion, amphitheater, etc.). Recognition of the diversity in Second Temple synagogues is certainly a valid and, indeed, crucial component for understanding their nature at this time. However, such a claim should be regarded as necessarybut not sucientfor a full appreciation of the institution. The present chapter has highlighted the commonality within this diversity. The rst-century synagogue, for all its variety, exhibited many shared features, both communal and religious; these common denominators, despite all the nuances from one community to the next, were far from inconsequential. With the notable exception of the pre-70 Jerusalem Temple, the synagogue encapsulated Jewish communal life within its wallsthe political, liturgical, social, educational, judicial, and spiritual. It is this inclusiveness that made the rst-century synagogue a pivotal institution in Jewish life that played a major role in enabling communities throughout the world to express their Jewishness, preserve their Jewish identity and communal
181. III Macc. 7, 1920.
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cohesion, and eventually negotiate the trauma and challenges created by the Temples destruction in 70 c.e. For all the engaging comparisons that have been made between the synagogue and comparable Greco-Roman associations (thiasos, koinon, collegia, etc.),182 many of them cogent to some degree, no analogy can do justice to the unique role of this institution. Given the Jews special needs, together with the willingness of Roman society to tolerate and often support such dierences, the synagogue assumed a key role within Jewish society.
182. Surveyed by Poland in his Geschichte des griechischen Vereinswesen.
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he impact of Jerusalems destruction in 70 c.e. on the Jews of Roman Palestine, and the concomitant elimination of the leadership and institutions associated with the city, were traumatic indeed.1 Suddenly, the major national and religious focus of Jewish lifethe Jerusalem Templehad been eliminated, along with the rituals and ceremonies that had constituted the warp and woof of divine worship in Israel. True enough, there was already a historical precedent for coping with such a loss. The destruction of Jerusalem and the First Temple in 586 b.c.e. did not spell the demise of Judaism or the disappearance of the Jewish people; life went on, adaptations were made, and the Temple was eventually restored.2 Moreover, Diaspora communities long before 70 c.e. had come to terms with their geographical distance from
1. On the response to 70 c.e., see L. Levine, Judaism from the Destruction of Jerusalem, 12548, 33840, and literature cited therein; Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, II, 11028; S. J. D. Cohen, Signicance of Yavneh, 4551; idem, From the Maccabees to the Mishnah, 21431; Goldenberg, Broken Axis, 86982; Bokser, Wall Separating God and Israel, 34974; idem, Rabbinic Responses to Catastrophe, 3761; Kirschner, Apocalyptic and Rabbinic Responses, 2746; Avery-Peck, Judaism without the Temple, 40931. 2. Whether and to what degree the destruction of the First Temple was remembered and commemorated in the Second Temple period are intriguing questions with little scholarly consensus. Discussion often centers around the nature and extent of observance of the Ninth of Av and other related fasts, a practice apparently indicated by M Rosh Hashanah 1, 3; T Taanit 3, 6 (p. 338); Y Betzah 2, 2, 61b (= B Taanit 13a). See also J. Rosenthal, Four Commemorative Fast Days, 44659.
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the Temple, which, for all practical purposes, no longer impacted on their daily lives,3 and the same may have been true, to a much lesser extent, for Galilean Jews. Some sects of the Second Temple period had created alternative forms of worship to supplement and, at times, even replace Temple ritual. Nevertheless, the tragedy of 70, following an era of dramatic Jewish demographic, religious, and social growth, undoubtedly caused serious reverberations throughout the Jewish world. A new reality had now emerged. Generally speaking, one can assume that those living closest to Jerusalem and the Temple were most aected by the destruction, the Jews of the region of Judaea proper more so than those of the Galilee, and the latter more so than those living in the Diaspora. In most cases, geographical propinquity probably correlated with a sense of attachment, dependence, and loss. No other Jewish institution was more aected by the events of 70 than the synagogue. In a religious vein, the synagogue had come to play an important, though limited, role on the local level; now, in the post-70 era, it would begin to acquire an increased centrality in Jewish religious life. Here, too, however, geographical distinctions are in order. The religious component of the Second Temple synagogue diered from place to place, and it appears that there may have been a correlation between distance from the Temple and degree of liturgical development in the synagogue. Diaspora synagogues seem to have had a more elaborate ritual than their Palestinian counterparts, and there may have been some dierences in worship between the Galilean and Judaean synagogues as well. Synagogues located in Jerusalem itself probably had a more limited religious agenda than elsewhere, given the presence of the Temple. Nevertheless, there is little question that Palestinian synagogues as a whole, whatever the dierences between them, were deeply aected by the destruction and that the institutions subsequent religious development was in no small measure a response to this catastrophe. Although the year 70 thus provides us with a clear watershed for the synagogue, the subsequent periodization of the post-70 era is less easily dened. The fourth century has been chosen as a convenient dividing line for a number of reasons, both external and internal; the former relates to more general historical circumstances, the latter to the primary source material at our disposalboth written and archaeological. The fourth century marked the ocial demise of the pagan Roman political order and its replacement by Christianity, beginning with Constantine and culminating under Theodosius I. The passing of the relatively benign pagan rule, with its generally tolerant attitude toward the Jews and Jewish tradition, and the concomitant rise of its Christian successor under the inuence, in varying degrees, of an often hostile clergy, is an obvious benchmark that could not but aect Jewish life.4 There is no precise date for this change of attitude and policy. Formally, we can point
3. Goodman, Diaspora Reactions to the Destruction of the Temple, 2738. 4. See discussion on Christian hostility below, Chap. 7. For an example of pagan tolerance, see Minucius Felix, Octavius 6, 13. On the issue of periodization in the post-70 era, see my article, Between Rome and Byzantium, 748.
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to 324 c.e. and Constantines ocial recognition of Christianity. However, this event did not immediately inaugurate a dramatic shift in the attitude toward the Jews and Judaism. The fourth century was a period of transition and uidity, when the fate of the Jews and Jewish institutions was far from being xed. On occasion Jews were adversely aected but often found support, and in some respects even gained in stature, under the Imperial authorities.5 The status of the Patriarchate at this time is a case in point.6 Thus, the full import of the Christianization of the Empire on the Jews became clear only at the end of a process that began in the early fourth century but required a number of generations to complete (on the part of the church and Imperial authorities) and be assimilated (on the part of both Christians and Jews). Between such dates as 324 (Constantines recognition of Christianity), the 330s (the reshaping of Jerusalem as a Christian city and the beginning of extensive church building throughout the country), 363 (the abandonment of Julians plans to rebuild the Temple), and 380 (Christianitys becoming the ocial religion), most Jews, it is safe to assume, became fully aware of the momentous changes that were taking place and possibly even cognizant of some of their long-range implications. The second major change of the fourth century was the close of the talmudic era in Palestine. The last sages mentioned in the Yerushalmi and midrashim lived in the third quarter of the fourth century and the nal editing of the Talmud took place soon thereafter. Thus, some time in the second half of the fourth century, all recording of specic attributions and names in the Palestinian rabbinic corpus ceased.7 With but rare exception, then, every attributed saying or story regarding Palestinian sages in rabbinic literature predates the mid fourth century, with the overwhelming bulk of the material associated with sages from the second and third centuries. The same holds true for aggadic midrashim; although these were not compiled until the following centuries, the ascribed material, i.e., names of people, places, and events, refers to the fourth century and earlier. Thus, specic references in the most important literary sources at our disposal regarding the ancient synagoguei.e., rabbinic literatureterminate some time in the latter half of that century. As a result, historiographically as well, the fourth century appears to have been a watershed in the Jewish narrative. This phenomenon is emphasized further by the massive appearance of archaeological evidence in the form of Palestinian synagogues, beginning in the fourth century. Based on the data at hand, it seems that post-70 synagogues were rst constructed in the late third and fourth centuries. Excavations carried out over the past generation indicate that the rst stages of a synagogue edice can be dated no earlier than the mid third century,
5. Goodman, State and Society, 11618; Stemberger, Jews and Christians, 2247, 23097; Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 6778; S. J. D. Cohen, Pagan and Christian Evidence, 17075; Millar, Jews of the Graeco-Roman Diaspora, 97112. 6. L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 2832; Stemberger, Jews and Christians, 23068. 7. Ginzberg, On Jewish Law and Lore, 2627; Sussmann, Once Again Yerushalmi Neziqin, 1013 and esp. 13233. See also Strack and Stemberger, Introduction to Talmud and Midrash, 18889.
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while most fall in the fourth century and later.8 Such is the case, for example, in the Golan at Qatzrin; in the Galilee at orvat Ammudim, Gush alav, Khirbet Shema, Meiron, Nevoraya, ammat Tiberias, ammat Gader, Maoz ayyim, Reov, Bet Shean (north), Chorazim, Baram, and possibly Merot; in the Shephelah at orvat Rimmon; and in Judaea at En Gedi, Eshtemoa, orvat Anim, Maon, and Susiya.9 The fth century, with but few exceptions (e.g., Capernaum and Sepphoris), is less well attested with regard to building activity. Few sites oer a rm dating for this period, partly because of the uncertainty of the numismatic and ceramic evidence. A renewed surge in synagogue building is in evidence for the sixth century.10 Of no less import is the fact that the rich artistic and epigraphic material from the Palestinian synagogues dates almost entirely from the fourth century onward. In short, the information to be garnered from the above elds of researcharchitecture, art, and epigraphyis far more detailed and comprehensive in the Byzantine era (fourth to seventh centuries) than for the later Roman period (i.e., the second to early fourth centuries), thus warranting a separate treatment. Our focus in this and the next chapter is the synagogue of Late Antique Palestine. The extensive literary evidence for this institution dwarfs Diaspora-related material for Late Antiquity; the hundreds of literary references to the synagogue as an institution, together with the many hundreds, if not thousands, of sources in Palestinian rabbinic legal and homiletic works referring to its liturgical functions, far outweigh comparable references to the Diaspora synagogue, Babylonia included. The archaeological material from Roman-Byzantine Palestine is likewise predominant, though to a somewhat lesser degree. To date, remains of well over 100 buildings throughout Roman Palestine have been identied, with some estimates going as high as 180 (g. 14).11 With regard to the epigraphical evidence, Palestinian synagogue remains have yielded some 130 inscriptions in Aramaic
8. The recently published synagogue from orvat Sumaqa on the Carmel has been dated by Dar to the later second or early third century, although the evidence for this dating is thin, per the excavators own admission; see Dar, Sumaqa, 73; Dar and Mintzer, Synagogue of Horvat Sumaqa, 162. In the same vein, Maoz has revived the Kohl-Watzinger position, dating all Galilean synagogues to the era of R. Judah I in the early third century (When Were the Galilean Synagogues First Constructed? 416 26), yet oers no new solid evidence for his view. 9. Groh, Stratigraphic Chronology of the Galilean Synagogue, 6069; Foerster, Dating Synagogues, 8794. See also Bloedhorn (Capitals of the Synagogue of Capernaum, 4954), who suggests a late third-century date for the early stage of the Capernaum synagogue, as does Fischer (Das korinthische Kapitell ). On the issues surrounding the dating of Galilean synagogues and several recent suggestions for an early third-century dating of Galilean synagogues (Dar, Maoz), see below and Chap. 9. 10. On the above sites, as well as others referred to below, seeunless otherwise indicatedthe relevant entries in E. Stern, NEAEHL, to be supplemented now by Amit, Synagogues, passim. On renewed synagogue construction in the sixth century, see Foerster, Basilical Plan as a Chronological Criterion, 17379; idem, Dating Synagogues, 92; and Yeivin, Synagogue at Korazim, 53*54*. 11. For the higher estimate, see Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues.
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and Hebrew and about 70 in Greek, as compared to 13 buildings and over 200 inscriptions from the Diaspora.12 To the Diaspora gure we should add well over 100 funerary inscriptions, deriving mostly from the catacombs of Rome, which refer to deceased synagogue ocials.
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and sectarian ritual in the pre-70 era, merited tractates in the Mishnah and Tosefta, although not in either talmud.15 Thus, for all its centrality in Jewish life following the destruction of the Temple, the synagogue per se merits minimal attention in the Mishnah and in tannaitic midrashim, though somewhat more in the Tosefta, the two talmuds, and later midrashim. Prayer (Tractate Berakhot) and, to a lesser extent, the Torah and haftarah readings (Tractate Megillah) are discussed more fully than other worship activities, but even here the former often does not necessarily refer to a synagogue setting. In Mishnah Berakhot, for example, the synagogue is never mentioned in relation to the two main prayers (the Shema and Amidah) that are discussed in the tractates rst ve chapters. The prayer settings noted include riding on an animal, traveling on a ship, and working in a tree or on a wall.16 The prescriptions in rabbinic literature regarding prayers may equally have applied to settings such as an academy, a private home, an open square, or a eld. Indeed, obligatory prayer at this time may have been, to a large degree, personal. While the apparent lack of attention given to the synagogue in rabbinic literature is rather surprising, upon further consideration the phenomenon should not be regarded as all that strange. Bearing in mind that rabbinic literature was never intended to be a balanced documentation of Jewish life in antiquity, we may regain some perspective not only on how to evaluate what has been preserved, but alsoand no less importanthow to judge what, in fact, has been omitted. Rabbinic literature is, rst and foremost, an account of laws, homilies, and stories that the rabbis deemed important to discuss and transmit and that later generations of sages saw t to preserve. From this mass of material, one can cull a great deal of information about contemporary Jewish society and even about certain aspects of the Roman world generally, though this clearly was not the intention of the editors of these compilations. If information extraneous to the rabbinic agenda does, in fact, appear, it is usually because it was in some way linked to a halakhic or homiletic context, or a rabbinically focused anecdote. What has been omitted in this literature regarding Jewish and even rabbinic society far outweighs what has been preserveda truism, indeed, but one that must always be borne in mind. Moreover, even what has been preserved should be treated with a measure of caution. This material has been ltered through many hands before reaching its nal form in a particular compilation, and it often reects the worldview and value system of those who transmitted and edited the material.17
15. See Reich, Synagogue and the Miqweh, 28997. 16. These examples raise an important question regarding the degree to which mishnaic rulings represent a systematic treatment of a given subject and thus deal with fundamental issues or the degree to which they deal with exceptions to the rule and problematic situations. It would appear that both dimensions are in evidence with regard to prayer. The presentation of the principal prayers in the rst part of Berakhot is general and universally prescriptive, although some pericopes may indeed deal with very specic and problematic issues whose more general applicability can only be guessed. 17. For various perspectives on the historical value of rabbinic literature and how this corpus should
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It is clear, therefore, that the rabbis were not interested in reporting on the synagogue per se, nor, for that matter, on any other communal framework. Regarding pre-70 institutions, except for the Temple, what little has been preserved are merely random traditions, some more idealized and tendentious than others, that the sages considered to be of signicance. Perhaps some of this material was intended to serve as a blueprint for the future. However, even with respect to their own day, i.e., the second to fourth centuries c.e., rabbinic sources regarding non-rabbinic frameworks are of limited value. We know very little about Roman and Jewish municipal institutions,18 and nothing systematic has been recorded regarding schools and charitable frameworks of the Jewish community two institutions certainly of interest to the sages. What does exist is at best anecdotal and fragmentary.19 Even as regards the rabbinic academy, an institution of prime importance and concern to the sages, our information happens to be even more limited than that relating to the synagogue.20 We know next to nothing as to where rabbinic academies were located, how they looked inside and out, how they functioned, who was in charge, how learning frameworks were organized, who the students were, and what role, if any, the institution played in the larger community. Nevertheless, for all the limitations in the nature and variety of sources on the synagogue, there is a real distinction to be made between second-century tannaitic material on the one hand and that of the third- and fourth-century amoraic sources on the other.21 The former corpus is generally much more restricted in scope, and its agenda is xed by either the halakhic emphasis and parameters set by R. Judah I in his Mishnah, on which the Tosefta expands greatly, or the biblical text that the tannaitic midrashim address.22 Amoraic material, which includes the talmuds as well as aggadic midrashim, is far richer in evidence regarding the synagogue.23 This increase in material may not be coincidental. For one, it reects a very profound transformation that was taking place within rabbinic circles in the third and fourth centuries. More rabbis were now involved in issues and institutions relating to the Jewish
be used, see, inter alia, Herr, Conception of History, 13242; Neusner, Formative Judaism, 99144; Green, Context and Meaning, 97111; Goodblatt, Towards a Rehabilitation of Talmudic History, 31 44; Goldenberg, History and Ideology, 15971; L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 1622; Gafni, Concepts of Periodization and Causality, 2138; and Shapira, Deposition of Rabban Gamaliel, 538. 18. Juster, Les Juifs, I, 43856; II, 243.; Baron, Jewish Community, I, 13340. 19. Baron, Jewish Community, I, 12426, 13031; S. Safrai, Education, 94570; Bergman, Charity in Israel, 1338. 20. Baron, Jewish Community, I, 15055; Urman, House of Assembly and the House of Study, 238 55. See also idem, On the Question of the Location of the Academy, 16372. 21. On this distinction and its ramications, see Strack and Stemberger, Introduction to Talmud and Midrash; EJ, II, 86575; XV, 798803; Halivni, Midrash, Mishnah and Gemara, 3875; Ab. Goldberg, Mishna, 21151; idem, Palestinian Talmud, 30319. 22. B. Cohen, Mishnah and Tosefta, 3758; EJ, XII, 93110; Ab. Goldberg, Tosefta, 283301. 23. Albeck, Introduction to the Mishnah, 79143.
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community generally and, as a result, became more responsive to its needs.24 This attitudinal and behavioral change on the part of the sages, responding here to a changing socioeconomic reality, is reected in a statement made by the third-century R. Isaac with regard to the teaching required of sages in his generation: At rst, when money was available [lit., a perutah was to be found], one would desire to study Mishnah and Talmud [i.e., halakhic material]; now that money is not available, and, what is more, we suer from the [gentile] kingdoms, one desires to hear Bible or aggadic teachings. 25 In this light, then, it is not surprising that we nd much more material relating to various facets of the synagogue as an institution included in later sources. However, there may have been another factor at play as well, and that is the increased rabbinic interest and involvement in the Late Antique Palestinian synagogue as it gradually acquired a more salient religious prole. Thus, the relative absence of second-century synagogue material in rabbinic literature may not reect the institutions minor importance at that time, but rather the relative indierence of contemporary rabbinic attitudes toward the synagogue and the rabbis circumscribed involvement in it; these factors determined the limited selection of synagogue-related material by tannaitic editors in the early third century.
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to be dated to the period of R. Judah the Prince and the Severan dynasty, has yet to be stratigraphically substantiated.26 With but one or two possible exceptions, none of the scores of post-70 buildings excavated to date stems from this period,27 and this applies to archaeological data from all parts of Roman Palestine: the Galilee and Golan, the Bet Shean region, the Jordan Valley, southern Judaea, and the coastal plain. No less striking than the absence of archaeological evidence following the destruction in 70 is the burst of synagogue building in the Galilee and elsewhere from the mid third century onward.28 As noted, excavations over the past generation have indicated that numerous synagogues were erected at this time. What is particularly unusual about this phenomenon is that it seems to have occurred when least expected. Given the heretofore generally accepted picture of the third century as a time of economic, social, and political instability, one would not have anticipated so intense a period of synagogue building.29 In fact, MacMullen has claimed that it is precisely at this time that pagan culture was on the wane, owing in part to the inability or unwillingness of wealthy benefactors to subsidize the pomp, performances, sacrices, and public feasting that had been the norm for
26. This date was already posited in the monumental study by Kohl and Watzinger (Antike Synagogen, 20418) and became axiomatic among archaeologists through the writings of Sukenik (Ancient Synagogues, 68) and Avi-Yonah (Synagogue Architecture, 6773). See also Avigad and Foerster (in L. Levine, Ancient Synagogues Revealed, 4243 and 4748, respectively), Httenmeister and Reeg (Antiken Synagogen, I, viiiix), and Tsafrir (On the Source of Architectural Design, 7079), who tend to prefer a thirdcentury dating. As noted above, Maoz (When Were the Galilean Synagogues First Constructed? 416 26) has attempted to revive the Kohl and Watzinger thesis, but cites no new hard evidence. 27. The earliest stratum at Nevoraya (north of Safed) is dated by E. M. Meyers (Second Preliminary Report on Excavations at en-Nabratein, 40; E. M. Meyers et al., Nabratein, 107778; Torah Shrine, 31718) to the mid second century. However, these remains are fragmentary and the published report is preliminary; the evidence has yet to be presented fully and systematically. Thus, there is some hesitation to view this phase as denitive evidence for a second-century Galilean synagogue. Another possible candidate for a second-century synagogue is a public building that was erected by the Jews of Qatzion, in the eastern Upper Galilee, in honor of Septimius Severus and his sons in 197 c.e. The nature of this building, however, remains a mystery. The preserved dedicatory inscription in stone may have once been axed to a synagogue, but it also could have belonged to some other public building; see Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 12529. For a second- to third-century dating regarding the orvat Sumaqa synagogue, see Dar and Mintzer, Synagogue of orvat Sumaqa, 162; Dar, Sumaqa, 73. The synagogues of Qiryat Sefer and Modiin that date from the rst and early second centuries should be regarded as continuations of pre-70 Judaean structures; see above, Chap. 3. 28. So, for example, at Gush alav, Nevoraya, Khirbet Shema, Meiron, orvat Ammudim, and En Gedi. A similar third century and later dating occurs at this time with respect to the Jewish catacombs in Rome. Those discovered date from the late second through fth centuries. Where, then, are the remains of Jews from the rst century b.c.e. or the rst and second centuries c.e.? And why were the existent catacombs of Late Antiquity in use precisely at this time? No convincing answers to these questions have been forthcoming to date. See Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 9699, 26768. 29. A classic description of this era, assuming it to be one of instability and anarchy, can be found in Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 89114.
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centuries. Such contributions were essential for the maintenance of pagan temple ritual. Third-century instability claimed a heavy toll, and across the Empire, whether in Italy, Asia Minor, or Syria, this century has invariably been characterized as one of decline and decay.30 Let us address each of the above two issues separately. The fact that practically no synagogue remains have been found for some two centuries after 70 is indeed surprising. It has been suggested that the absence of synagogues may have been caused by their destruction in the wake of the various revolts throughout Palestine between 66 and 135 c.e., especially that of Bar-Kokhba (132135 c.e.). We have already taken note of Malalas report of Vespasians (perhaps Titus) conversion of the synagogues of Caesarea and Daphne into an odeum and theater respectively, and to this we might also add the destruction of a major Alexandrian synagogue as a result of the 115117 Diaspora revolt.31 Rabbinic literature knows of one such case in Roman Palestine. The following is recorded in the Bavli:
R. Ami and R. Asi came to visit him [R. Yoanan, and] said: Was there not an incident in the Tiberian synagogue [regarding] a lock with a fastening device [ ]at its tip that was a subject of dispute between R. Elazar and R. Yosi [second century] until they tore a Torah scroll in their anger? Do you actually imagine [that they, in fact, tore a scroll]? Rather, say: A Torah scroll was torn in their anger. And R. Yosi b. Qisma was there [and] said: I would be surprised [i.e., I predict] if this synagogue [where such an incident occurred] did not become [a place of ] idolatry. And so it happened. 32
Despite the chronological issues connected with this source, as well as its citation only in the Bavli, there may be embedded here some memory (following R. Yosi b. Qismas statement) of a Tiberian synagogue that was converted into a pagan temple some time in the early second century. Might this possibly be a reference to the building of a Hadrianeum in Tiberias, as reported by Epiphanius? 33 If so, then this source would be an indication of the destruction of a second-century synagogue or its conversion into a pagan temple. The issue must remain moot for the present. Regarding the post-135 Hadrianic persecutions, there is no way of verifying whether these decrees included the obliteration of existing synagogues; no substantiation of such a claim exists in either rabbinic or archaeological material, and no other source mentions
30. MacMullen, Paganism, 12730; see also, for example, Meiggs, Roman Ostia, 8385 (deterioration and decline); Magie, Roman Rule in Asia Minor, 688723 (decay and chaos); Downey, History of Antioch, 25253 (strife, uncertainty, a disorderly and dicult period). On the social-religious crisis in Egyptian villages that gave rise to the monastic movement, see Brown, Making of Late Antiquity, 81. 31. On Malalas, see above, Chap. 4, notes 229, 232, and 233. On the destruction of Alexandrian synagogue(s) as a result of the revolt in 115117 c.e., see Y Sukkah 5, 1, 55b; Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, 93. 32. B Yevamot 96b, and variations in Y Sheqalim 2, 7, 47a, as well as the comments in Eliav, Sites, Institutions and Daily Life, 6871. On the word ,see Jastrow, Dictionary, loc. cit. 33. Epiphanius, Panarion, 30, 12.
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or even alludes to the closing or dismantling of synagogues;34 furthermore, no archaeological excavation has uncovered a destruction layer clearly related to the second century. Even if we were to ignore this negative evidence, there is little to substantiate the claim that the Bar-Kokhba revolt or its aftermath aected the Galilee in any measurable way.35 Thus, the Hadrianic persecutionswhile perhaps explaining the lack of evidence in several localesclearly do not account for the absence of remains throughout the country. A second theory attributes the scarcity of archaeological remains for this period to the fact that the synagogue, like the contemporary church, was not an identiable public building, but rather a private home, a domus ecclesiae,36 and hence the diculty in identifying such remains as synagogues. However, to compare the synagogue with the domus ecclesiae is to assume that the congregation invariably met in an ordinary home. While this may have been the case at times in the Diaspora, it would contradict everything we know about Palestinian synagogues. On the one hand, all rst-century synagogues were clearly communal buildings, constructed (or restored) as separate edices with columns as well as benches on three or four sides, as found at Gamla, Masada, Herodium, Qiryat Sefer, and Modiin. Literary sources likewise conrm the public character of synagogue buildings. At Caesarea, Dor, Tiberias, and Jerusalem, the synagogues noted appear to have been separate, identiable buildings. On the other hand, synagogues from the late third century onward were also public buildings with a presence and prominence analogous, in large measure, to those of the rst century. Rabbinic sources as well as archaeological nds conrm that the synagogue was a public edice (see below). Moreover, there is no reason to assume that synagogues went underground from the late rst to third centuries and were ensconced in private dwellings, as the church was forced to do owing to its status as a religio illicita. A hiatus of approximately two hundred years in the building of public Jewish communal institutions appears most unlikely. Indeed, as noted, rabbinic literature indicates just the opposite. The evidence points to the continued centrality of the synagogue as a multifaceted communal institution.
34. On the Hadrianic persecutions following the Bar-Kokhba revolt, see Lieberman, Persecution of the Jews, 21345; Herr, From the Destruction of the Temple, 36567; Mor, Bar-Kochba Revolt, 23840. The comments of R. Judah b. Ilai (mid second century c.e.) regarding what is to be done with a synagogue that has been destroyed may be relevant here (M Megillah 3, 3); however, this comment stands alone and indeed may be only theoretical. 35. Goodman, State and Society, 13738; Mor, Bar-Kochba Revolt, 10321; Oppenheimer, Galilee, 3744; and the discussion of this issue in Oppenheimer et al., Jewish Community in the Galilee, 5183. 36. Tsafrir, On the Source of Architectural Design, 7980. The term domus ecclesiae in this context is somewhat problematic. It may be understood as a religious community building, much as was found at Dura or Capernaum, or it may refer to a house church that did not entail interior alterations for use by the community and was thus architecturally indistinguishable from other private buildings. The Dura church is thus not a domus ecclesiae, but rather a private dwelling that was converted into an identiable church building; see White, Social Origins, 25. On the conversion of private homes into synagogues in many Diaspora communities, see idem, Building Gods House, 6277.
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A third approach, advocated by Meyers and Strange, suggests that the absence of synagogues was due to the fact that the inux of Judaeans to the Galilee took place only in the late rst and second centuries. Since these people acquired the means to construct large buildings over the course of the next century, it was only then that the earliest Galilean synagogues were erected.37 This explanation assumes that synagogue building was a distinctly Judaean phenomenon and that the Galileans themselves were not interested, willing, or capable of undertaking such projects. Such an assumption is wholly gratuitous, as we have seen above (Chap. 3), for the Galilee boasted synagogues as early as the rst century c.e. A fourth explanation, however, may be the most plausible. At site after site, in cities or villages, public or private buildings, the extensive rebuilding activity from Late Antiquity or, for that matter, from any period thereafter has almost entirely obliterated earlier remains. For example, our knowledge of pre-Severan Sebaste, Bet Shean, or Gerasa, and to a lesser extent pre-Byzantine Caesarea, is limited and fragmentary.38 As regards Second Temple Jerusalem, the extensive and monumental building program carried out by Herod and his successors during the last one hundred years of this era almost entirely obliterated earlier remains. Given the large-scale construction of synagogues and other structures in Late Antiquity, a similar situation may have held true for earlier synagogue structures as well. Only the synagogue remains at Nevoraya and perhaps Capernaum (at least as interpreted by the Franciscan excavators) may possibly be construed as examples of later structures replacing earlier ones lying beneath them. In other words, the absence of second- and third-century remains may have been the result of their elimination by later construction.39 Nevertheless, despite the lacunae in our sources, both literary and archaeological, the synagogue undoubtedly continued to function as a central communal institution in Jewish communities everywhere after 70 and continued to do so throughout the ensuing centuries. Moreover, the centrality and prominence of the synagogue in the rst century are matched by a similar status in the third and fourth centuries (albeit with an enhanced religious component); there was hardly time for dramatic changes in such a relatively short interim. The few tannaitic sources we have are too explicit in this regard for us to assume otherwise. Take, for example, the revealing exchange between two rabbis in Lydda in the rst half of the third century c.e.:
37. E. M. Meyers and Strange, Archaeology, the Rabbis, and Early Christianity, 141. 38. Interestingly, the same holds true for Diaspora synagogues. Those of Late Antiquity cannot be traced before the second century or third centuries c.e. Regarding rst-century Judaea, see E. P. Sanders, Historical Figure, 100, and above, Chap. 3. 39. On a possible reference to a second-century synagogue in En Gedi, see Lewis, Documents from the Bar Kokhba Period, 8485. My thanks to Prof. H. Eshel for calling my attention to this document. On the use of spolia from earlier buildings in constructing later ones, see below, Chap. 9.
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And R. ama bar anina and R. Hoshaya were walking among the synagogues of Lydda. R. ama bar anina said to R. Hoshaya: How much money have my ancestors [lit., my fathers] invested here [in these buildings]? The other responded: How many souls have your ancestors lost here [lit., have they sunk here]? There are no people to study Torah! 40
Here, then, we have two contrasting rabbinical reactions to the impressive synagogue buildings in early third-century Lydda: one takes pride in the material remains; the other is sharply critical of this use of communal funds. Of interest to us is the fact that synagogue structures were standing at this time, and it is clear from the exchange that we are dealing with imposing edices. Moreover, this report is far from sui generis; other sources report many synagogue buildings in third-century Palestinee.g., the reputed eighteen synagogues in Sepphoris and its environs at the time of Rabbi Judah Is funeral (ca. 225), or the thirteen structures in Tiberias (see below). Broader contextual circumstances would also argue for a similar conclusion, i.e., an increased role, prestige, and sanctity for the synagogue following the Temples disappearance. Thus, any attempt to base far-reaching conclusions regarding the nature and importance of the synagogue in the post-70 period based on the presence or absence of archaeological material is fraught with danger. Only an assessment that balances the archaeological and literary remains within the historical context of the late Roman era can hope to achieve some degree of credibility.
40. Y Sheqalim 5, 6, 49b; Y Peah 8, 9, 21b. On the town of Lydda in this period, see J. J. Schwartz, Jewish Settlement in Judaea, 6980; Oppenheimer, Jewish Lydda, 11536; and Rosenfeld, Lod and Its Sages, 71. 41. So, for example, ammat Tiberias (IIb); Khirbet Shema, Nevoraya, Meiron, Gush alav, Bet Shearim, orvat Rimmon, orvat Ammudim, Maoz ayyim, ammat Gader, and En Gedi. Several of the above were excavated decades ago, rendering their dating insecure.
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These traditions are indeed unique. Only for this periodand only in these pericopes does Palestinian rabbinic literature exhibit a concern about rebuilding or relocating synagogue buildings.43 For our purposes, these sources from the mid to late third century are relevant in that they attest to actual cases of Jewish communities interested in building new synagogues with the remains of old ones. Is it merely coincidental that these particular sources were preserved, and were there, in fact, other instances in Late Antiquity that simply do not appear in rabbinic literature? Or, alternatively, are these sources reective of a unique situation in third-century Palestine, in which older synagogues were being abandoned and new ones required elsewhere? If the latter is the case, then we might ask why this need emerged at this particular time? Was it merely because populations were relocated to the Galilee at this time? 44 Had the local community grown and now required larger facilities? Was it a question of urban renewal and local shifts of population? Or was there some sort of destruction or upheaval that eliminated the older buildings? The last alternative appears improbable, as we have no evidence of persecution or destruction from the third century.45 Whatever the specic reasons for rebuilding, rabbinic literature fully corroborates the archaeological evidence that construction was being undertaken at this time. An interesting parallel to this Jewish phenomenon may be found in extant Samaritan traditions that speak of a major religious revival in the third century c.e. under the leadership of the legendary Baba Rabba. The Samaritan chronicles relate a series of reforms instituted under his aegis, including the reorganization of Samaritan leadership around an appointed council of seven elders (three priests and four laymen) and the establishment of a system of regional ocials in which one layman and one priest were assigned to each district.46 The cornerstone of this reformation was the synagogue (g. 15).47 Baba
42. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. 43. The only other comparable traditions come from third- and fourth-century Babylonia and involve R. isda, R. Papa, and R. Huna; see B Megillah 26b. 44. According to E. M. Meyers suggestion regarding the inux of Judaean immigrants into the Galilee following the two Jewish revolts (Galilean Regionalism, 99). 45. On third-century conditions in Palestine, see Lieberman, Palestine in the Third and Fourth Centuries, 32944 (= Texts and Studies, 11227); Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 35136. 46. Abu l-fath, in Samaritan Documents (pp. 14246); Kitab al-Tarikh (pp. 17786); Chronicle II, in Samaritan Chronicle (pp. 6576); Adler, Une Nouvelle Chronique, 8796. On these reforms generally, see Samaritan Chronicle (pp. 22838); Crown, Byzantine and Moslem Period, 5859; idem, Samaritans in the Byzantine Orbit, 11011; idem, Samaritan Religion, 3234, 4143; Kippenberg, Die Synagoge, 35160. On the reforms in Samaritan leadership, see Samaritan Chronicle (pp. 6674); Kitab al-Tarikh (pp. 18485 [see also p. 181]); Samaritan Documents (pp. 14345 and n. 170). On Samaritan synagogues generally, see Pummer, Samaritan Synagogues and Jewish Synagogues, 11860. 47. Samaritan Documents (pp. 142, 146); Kitab al-Tarikh (pp. 177, 183); Samaritan Chronicle (pp. 65, 71 72).
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
15. Torah shrine from the mosaic oor of the Samaritan synagogue at Khirbet Samara.
Rabba allegedly reopened numerous synagogues that had been closed, rst by the emperor Commodus (180192 c.e.) and later by Alexander Severus (222235 c.e.).48 Moreover, he is said to have built a large synagogue on Mt. Gerizim, opposite the site of the former Samaritan temple, and next to a miqveh:
Later, the priest Baba Rabba built a ritual bath for purication on the boundary of the chosen place, Mount Gerizim Beth-El, the Mountain of Inheritance and Divine Presence. . . . He further built a Synagogue, adjoining the Chosen Place, Mount Gerizim Beth-El, so that the people could pray in it opposite this holy mountain.49
Baba Rabba also built eight additional synagogues in various Samaritan villages, seven of which are specically mentioned.50 Most revealing, however, is the following informa48. Adler, Une Nouvelle Chronique, 8587; Kitab al-Tarikh (pp. 16672). 49. Samaritan Chronicle (p. 71). According to Abu l-fath: On the periphery of the Holy Mountain Baba Rabba built a water pool for purication at prayer times, that is, before the rising of the sun and its setting. And he erected a prayer house for the people to pray in, opposite the Holy Mountain; see Kitab al-Tarikh (pp. 18283); see also Samaritan Documents (pp. 14546). 50. Samaritan Documents (p. 146); Kitab al-Tarikh (p. 183); Samaritan Chronicle (pp. 7172). These synagogues are said to have been built of stone (it is specically mentioned that no timber was used), and all had earthen oors. Chronicle II mentions the names of seven of the eight synagogues with earthen
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tion: He built in them a place in which to read and to interpret, and to hear petitions in the southern part of the house of prayer, so that anyone with a personal problem could ask the ukama [i.e., the sage] about it and be given a sound answer. 51 Thus, we learn here of a school combined with a setting for the ukama to deal with issues brought to him by the people, a phenomenon not unfamiliar to the contemporary Jewish synagogue. Few scholars have reservations regarding the historical basis of Baba Rabbas reforms. However, a vigorously debated issue of late is that of dating, and the diversity of opinion in this regard has been fueled by the ambiguity and contradictory nature of the sources themselves. While the various chronicles clearly place Baba Rabbas activity in the mid third century, under the emperors Alexander Severus, Gordianus, and Philip, they also note the existence of Constantinople at the time as well as the fact that Baba Rabba was incarcerated and died there. This would, of course, bring us to the fourth century, for Constantinople was built in the 320s and dedicated by Constantine in 330. Moreover, several names mentioned in connection with Baba Rabba have been arguably identied with fourth-century gures. It is little wonder, then, that the dating of Baba Rabbas activity has been the subject of much controversy. Early in the last century, Montgomery advocated a fourth-century setting, more specically the era of Constantius (337361), and many have since followed his lead.52 In his edition of Chronicle II, J. M. Cohen has suggested that Baba Rabba lived around the turn of the fourth century and was publicly active for a twenty-year period, ca. 308328.53 Of late, however, a number of scholars, including Crown, Hall, and Stenhouse, have opted for the traditional Samaritan dating, assuming a mid third-century setting for these reformations.54 If this last suggestion is accepted, then Samaritan synagogue building would constitute an interesting chronological parallel to the appearance
oors, Abu l-fath the names of all eight. Magen, however, has suggested that these particular sites may, in fact, date to the thirteenth century, when these chronicles were composed (Samaritan Synagogues [Eng.], 22627). On the archaeological discoveries of Samaritan synagogues, see ibid., 193230; idem, Samaritan Synagogues (Heb.), 6690; idem, Samaritan Synagogues and Their Liturgy, 22964. The recently discovered Samaritan synagogues at el-Khirbe and Khirbet Samara have been tentatively dated to the fourth century c.e. See also Pummer, How to Tell a Samaritan Synagogue, 2435; Z. Safrai, Samaritan Synagogues, 84112. 51. Kitab al-Tarikh (p. 183). See also Samaritan Documents (p. 146). 52. Montgomery, Samaritans, 1014. See also Kippenberg, Die Synagoge, 351; Samaritan Documents (pp. 197201 nn. 192, 204); Broadie, Samaritan Philosophy, 2; Isser, Dositheans, 43, 95; MacDonald, Theology of the Samaritans, 26; Pummer, Samaritans, 4; Httenmeister and Reeg, Antiken Synagogen, II, 534; and most recently Magen, Samaritans in the Roman-Byzantine Period, 22122. 53. Samaritan Chronicle (pp. 22428). 54. Crown, Byzantine and Moslem Period, 56; idem, Samaritans in the Byzantine Orbit, 105108; idem, Samaritan Religion, 3234; Hall, Samaritan History, 5254; idem, Samaritan Religion, 214; Stenhouse, Fourth-Century Date, 31726; idem, Baba Rabba, 32732.
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of the mid third-century Jewish synagogues, and the two may even be related in some way.55 Returning to the question of how one might explain the resurgence in the building of Jewish synagogues in the latter part of the third century, given what we know of the period generally, our response can be only tentative. One approach would be to discount the literary and numismatic evidence, and the heretofore accepted scholarly opinion regarding a third-century crisis in Palestine. Either the period of anarchy was not as severe as once assumed or, more likely, dierent regions of the Empire may have been variously aected.56 Moreover, not all areas may have suered to the same degree.57 An engaging case has been made of late by Bar that not only was there no third century crisis in Palestine, but that the economy grew steadily from the second century c.e. into the Byzantine period.58 While Bar has undoubtedly brought a welcomed balance to the older picture, his analysis and conclusions may be somewhat overstated. Indeed, there is evidence of decline, and not all the data he cites are accurate. In short, it is doubtful if the picture was as rosy as he would have it, and one should be cautious in summarily dismissing the mid to late third-century sages negative comparisons of conditions in their own day with those that prevailed a generation or two earlier.59 Even if we discount part of their statements as hyperbole, it would be wholly gratuitous and arbitrary to disregard them altogether.60 Moreover, the numismatic as well as other literary evidence cannot be entirely ignored as if there were no instability whatsoever at the time. A second approach toward solving this conundrum is to accept both the historicity of political and economic diculties of the time and the archaeological evidence, but to assign each set of data to a dierent period. The nadir of economic and political conditions in the third quarter of the century is apparently what is reected in rabbinic sources. To55. A number of artistic similarities between Jewish and Samaritan synagogues of the third and fourth centuries have been noted by Amit ( Curtain, 57175), to which one might add the cluster of religious symbols appearing almost simultaneously in the fourth-century synagogues at ammat Tiberias (Jewish) and at el-Khirbe and Khirbet Samara (Samaritan). Crown has suggested a signicant Jewish inuence on Samaritan practice at this time: There are geographical, social and historical reasons for arguing that Jews and Samaritans lived in close symbiosis with a consequence that Rabbinic Judaism was a formative factor in Samaritanism despite Samaritan denials (Samaritan Religion, 35). On a possible Samaritan inuence on the rabbinic listings for names of Jerusalem about this time, see Shinan, Seventy Names of Jerusalem. 56. Av. Cameron, Later Roman Empire, 112; L. Levine, Palestine in the Third Century, 119. and esp. 13643. With regard to Sardis, see White, Social Origins, 317 n. 52. 57. Reservations as to the extent of the third century crisis have been stated in Watson, Aurelian and the Third Century, 120; and M. Grant, Collapse and Recovery of the Roman Empire, passim. 58. Bar, Was There a 3rd-c. Economic Crisis in Palestine? 4354. See also Brown, World of Late Antiquity, 4995. 59. Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 89.; Sperber, Roman PalestineLand, 1199. 60. See Alfldy, Crisis of the Third Century, 89111.
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ward the end of this century, however, specically in its fourth quarter, during the reign of Diocletian (284311), the economic and political situation of the Empire ameliorated, and the archaeological material thus may reect primarily this period of stabilization. Such a chronological division is certainly possible, but it may be just a little too neat and compartmentalized. Some archaeological and literary evidence for synagogue building seems to point more toward the midand not latethird century, although, admittedly, precision with regard to dating is impossible, while certain literary traditions indicate a continued decline in the late third century, if not into the fourth as well. A third approach would accept the evidence of both types of sources, archaeological and literary, claiming that the building of synagogues was, at least in part, in direct response to the challenges of the third century. Having lost the Temple, Jerusalem, and much of the region of Judaea following the unsuccessful rebellions in the rst and second centuries, and now nding themselves in the throes of political and social instability, not to speak of a growing Christian presence and perhaps a reassertive paganism, many Jewish communities may have sought to reconrm their identity and demonstrate their cohesiveness by erecting communal buildings, at times of monumental proportions.61 Moreover, the breakdown of a political order could have had salubrious economic ramications, allowing people to avoid taxes and other payments and thus direct their monies toward local projects such as the building of synagogues. Renewed building activity in the face of political and economic distress is not an unknown phenomenon in the course of history and can be documented in other thirdcentury locales as well. The drive to build transcended all boundaries, touching upon Jew and non-Jew alike across the Empire. Emperors, urban aristocracy, and villagers from Egypt, Libya, Asia Minor, Numidia, and Gaul undertook building projects at this time.62 The third century witnessed the erection of walls and the refurbishing of cities such as Tiberias and Caesarea,63 and if the above Samaritan evidence is taken into account, then synagogues were also being restored and built anew in Samaria. Christians, too, were engaged at this time in building new churches. Porphyry refers to the great buildings of the Christians, which he says imitate the construction of temples, and Eusebius describes the extensive building activity of Christians throughout the Empire even before the large-scale persecutions of 303. According to him, Christians already began to build large halls to accommodate the masses of people who attended services, even though such ostentatious building might arouse the envy and hostility of their pagan neighbors.64 Lac61. Later on, Jews would express their need for self-identity through the massive use of Jewish symbols, a phenomenon that seems to make its rst appearance at this time. See L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah, 13153. 62. MacMullen, Roman Governments Response, 11920. 63. Tiberias: B Bava Batra 7b. Caesarea: Holum et al., King Herods Dream, 10753; L. Levine, Roman Caesarea, passim. 64. Porphyry, Adversos Christianos, frag. 76; Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 8, 1, 56.
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tantius reports that in 303, at the beginning of the persecution of Christians, Diocletian ordered the destruction of a large church on a hill adjacent to his palace in Nicopolis (Asia Minor).65 On the basis of these reports and other evidence, White asserts that the third century witnessed a spate of church building with larger and more formal structures than the domus ecclesiae that he calls aula ecclesiae.66 This last-noted alternative, i.e., synagogue building as an act of rearmation in the face of socio-economic stress and perhaps religious uneasiness, seems to be the most plausible explanation available. Thus, the third century, no less than other eras in the course of history, dees sweeping generalizations that only tend to obliterate cross-currents, obfuscate distinctions, and blur nuances.
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16. Suggested reconstruction of the Meiron synagogue at the crest of the mountain.
One should not behave lightheartedly in a synagogue. One should not enter them in the heat because of the heat, nor in the cold because of the cold, nor in the rain because of the rain. And one should not eat in them nor drink in them nor sleep in them nor stroll in them, nor just relax [lit., enjoy oneself ] in them, but [one should] read Scriptures and study laws [lit., Mishnah], and engage in midrash [i.e., exegetical commentary] in them. A public eulogy may be delivered therein. R. Judah [b. Ilai] said: The above relates to a standing synagogue, but if destroyed, they are to be left alone, and let grass grow there as a sign of sadness (or despair). 70
This source is often mistakenly quoted as an indication of what did not take place in the synagogue. In reality, however, it indicates that these were recurrent behavioral patterns to which the rabbis objected; whether or not the sages were successful in eecting change in this regard is unknown. As of the time of the above statement at least, these objectionable practices were still very much a part of the synagogue scene and inspired the above apodictic declaration. By focusing on what the rabbis wished to prohibit, we may gain a clearer idea of how, in fact, many of these synagogues actually functioned. Indeed, the institution referred to in the above Tosefta source was a community center. It was a place to gather and socialize (often involving food and drink), conduct business (following one interpretation of the term lightheartedly),71 and take shelter in inclement weather; it was a hostel and a place of relaxation; nally, it was a place for study and a platform for public eulogies. The sages were in agreement about the two last-mentioned functions; however, the community at large apparently recognized the legitimacy of the other activities as well. Thus, the sages made the above declaration in an attempt to preserve the reverence they deemed betting for such an institution. The Tosefta, in fact, describes an institution akin to the synagogue in Jerusalem per the Theodotos inscription; the Sardis and Halicarnassus synagogues per the edicts preserved by Josephus; and
70. T Megillah 2, 18 (p. 353). 71. B Megillah 28b.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
the Dura Europos, En Gedi, Capernaum, and ammat Tiberias (last stage) synagogues per the archaeological remains. Thus, the above-noted functions seem to have characterized the ancient synagogue throughout antiquity and across all geographical borders.72 A related Palestinian tradition is cited in the Bavli:
It has been taught: R. Ishmael b. Elazar says: The ammei ha-aretz die because of two transgressions: for calling the holy ark [simply] an ark [ ]and for calling the synagogue a bet am [lit., house of people, or a community center].73
This source is indeed extreme in its censure. Ostensibly, the two matters singled out as cardinal sins (that ought to incur death) do not appear to be so severe. While the sages objection to these terms certainly reects his negative attitude toward these practices, the source would seem to describe what appears to have been a widespread reality. The latter term (bet am) indicates that many people related to the synagogue as a community center and not primarily as a religious institution. However, in addition to its communal dimension, a standard feature of all later synagogues that rst made its appearance in third-century structures was the orientation toward Jerusalem.74 Almost all synagogues of the period faced this direction, although the expression of this orientation may have diered from building to building. With the exception of Arbel, Galilean-type synagogues positioned their elaborate and ornate facades toward Jerusalem and the Temple that once stood there (g. 17). The interior was oriented in this direction as well; most of these structures had three rows of columns, on the west, north, and east. Only the southern side of the building, facing Jerusalem, had
72. For somewhat similar roles of the pagan shrine in rural districts of Late Antiquity, see Libanius, Pro templis 30, 8. 73. B Shabbat 32a (see below). 74. See Landsberger, Sacred Direction, 181203; and below, Chap. 9. See also Wilkinson, Orientation, 1630 (to be used with caution). The uniqueness and sanctity of Jerusalem has also found expression in a number of other tannaitic traditions; see, for example, M Kelim 1, 69; M Ketubot 13, 11.
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18. Isometric reconstruction of the Gush alav synagogue. Note the Torah shrine below, to the left of the entrance.
none, as this direction served as the halls focus.75 Other synagogues, at Khirbet Shema and Gush alav, had a bima against the southern wall (g. 18), and still others, as at Arbel, had a niche facing south. Synagogues in the southern part of the country, e.g., Eshtemoa and Susiya, thus faced north. On occasion, the orientation in a given building changed over time. So, for example, the synagogues at Merot, ammat Tiberias, and En Gedi at rst had entrances facing Jerusalem, but later on these were replaced by a bima and the entrances were relocated to another side of the building.76 Orienting oneself toward Jerusalem in prayer, clearly documented already in biblical literature, is emphatically articulated in third-century rabbinic sources.
Those who stand outside Israel must direct their hearts [i.e., face] toward the Land of Israel, as it is written: And they will pray toward their land [II Chr. 6:38]. And those standing in the Land of Israel direct their hearts toward Jerusalem and pray, as it is written: And they shall pray toward this city [ibid.]. Those standing in Jerusalem shall direct their hearts toward the Temple, as it is written: And they shall pray toward this House [ibid., 6:32]. Those standing in the Temple should direct their hearts toward the Holy of Holies and pray, as it is written: And they shall pray toward this place [I Kgs. 8:30]. Thus, those who stand in the north will face south, those who stand in the south will face north, those in the east will face west and those in the west will face east. Thus, all Israel will be praying to the same place.77
75. Foerster, Ancient Synagogues, 291. 76. On these sites, see above, note 67. 77. T Berakhot 3, 1516 (pp. 1516); SifreDeuteronomy 29, 26 (p. 47); Y Berakhot 4, 5, 8bc; B Berakhot 30a; Pesiqta Rabbah 33 (p. 149b), and elsewhere. See also M Berakhot 5, 5; Tanuma, Qedoshim, 10 (p. 39b); and the thorough discussion in Ehrlich, Non-Verbal Language, 6496. This last source empha-
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The emphasis on physical orientation toward Jerusalem undoubtedly reects profound changes transpiring within the Jewish community and its synagogues in the late Roman period. On one level, it was a powerful statement of religious and ethnic particularism. No longer was the main communal institution to be a neutral gathering place, as were the rst-century Judaean synagogue buildings. The synagogue was now meant to embody historical memories, a communal attachment to the present, and, perhaps, hopes (messianic and other) for the future.78 This physical expression of an attachment to Jerusalem and the Templedespite the fact that each buildings ornamentation and architectural style were almost exclusively borrowed, selected, and adapted from the material culture of the surrounding worldwas expressed rst and foremost via its orientation. However, the synagogues newly articulated orientation was also a function of a more profound change touching upon the very nature of the institution: The synagogues of Roman Palestine began to acquire a distinctly religious prole. While its manifold communal functions continued unabated, the synagogues main assembly hall gradually became something more than a large gathering place, as its liturgical role was now emphasized more than ever before. In some synagogues, this new emphasis found expression only in the outward orientation and in the interior arrangement of columns; in others, a permanent bima, niche, or aedicula was placed in or against the Jerusalem-oriented wall to emphasize the desired liturgical focus.79 Clearly, worship was becoming an increasingly important component of the synagogues activities, as it presumably had been for some time in the Diaspora. By the third century, this new emphasis was receiving an appropriate architectural expression. Indeed, there can be little question that the increasingly dominant religious dimension of the synagogue was the major factor in making the issue of orientation so pronounced in synagogue architecture of Late Antiquity. The Jews now began to imitate the widespread practice of a xed orientation that was customary in pagan and, later, Christian buildings. For the most part, both pagan temples and Christian churches faced east,80 as did the Tabernacle and both Jerusalem Temples for well over one thousand years. The Jews of late Roman Palestine, from the Galilee to southern Judaea (and in the Diaspora),
sizes Jerusalem and the Temple as the center (omphalos) of the world. See Alexander, Jerusalem as the Omphalos, 10419, and esp. 11316. 78. See Gafni, Land, Center and Diaspora, 5873. On the belief that the divine Shekhinah continues to reside in the Temple (as well as rival beliefs), see Ehrlich, Place of the Shekhina, 31529. 79. See Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 16687. See also idem, Niche and the Ark, 4353. It is for this reason, perhaps, that the elders who had previously faced the congregation with their backs to Jerusalem (T Megillah 3, 21 [p. 360]) now also faced in the direction of Jerusalem (Differences in Customs, no. 36 [p. 156]). For the continued development of this emphasis in the subsequent Byzantine period, see below, Chap. 7. 80. Cf., however, the comments in Wilkinson, Orientation, 2629; Herbert, Orientation of Greek Temples, 3134.
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altered this practice completely and dramatically. While possibly inuenced by the earlier Jewish tradition of praying toward Jerusalem,81 the communities also may have done this out of a demonstrative rejection of pagan practice or owing to their strongly felt religious and ethnic identication with the city. The seven-branched menorah as a decorative (symbolic?) element also rst appeared in late third-century synagogues. The large menorah incised on the northern lintel of the Khirbet Shema building is a case in point, as is the menorah inside a wreath in the center of the Nevoraya synagogue lintel. The possibility that an actual three-dimensional menorah existed in some synagogues is indicated by a number of rabbinic sources, the earliest of which is the Tosefta, which states that such an object was, in fact, donated to a synagogue; several note that the legendary emperor Antoninus made such a donation.82 While the latter traditions concerning Antoninus may be of questionable historical value, the example cited by these sources was undoubtedly drawn from the synagogue reality of the time and would thus attest to the presence of menorot in some synagogue buildings.83 The rabbis now began to claim that synagogue liturgy requiring ten male participants guaranteed Gods presence (= Shekhinah) there. By invoking the verse God stands in the congregation of the Lord (Ps. 82:1), the sages asserted: Wherever ten persons assemble in a synagogue, Gods presence is with them. 84 It is this enhanced religious dimension of the synagogue in the rabbis eyes that seems to have been behind their protest against using the synagogue for secular or non-worship purposes. Clearly, they did not approve of what they saw, and for that reason they articulated above-quoted prohibition. There were other types of protest as well. As noted above, the second-century sage R. Ishmael b. Elazar declared that the am ha-aretz deserves to die for calling the holy ark a chest (arana) and the synagogue a house of people (bet am).85 It is eminently clear that any secular reference to the synagogue or its appurtenances was anathema to this sage (and probably others as well; for example, those who preserved and transmitted this particular statement). Whether such admonitions were eective is yet another issue. Several inscriptions indicate that this rabbinic dictum was either unknown or ignored in some communities. The term arana, used to identify the Torah shrine, has been found at Naveh in the Hauran and at Dura Europos.86 The rabbinic desire that the synagogue evolve into a substantially dierent institution following the destruction of the Temple is reected in a series of taqqanot (enactments)
81. I Kgs. 8:44; II Chron. 6:34, 38; Dan. 6:11. See also M Berakhot 4, 5. 82. T Megillah 2, 14 (p. 352); Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a; B Arakhin 6b, as well as Chaps. 9 and 17. 83. On the Khirbet Shema and Nevoraya (Nabratein) synagogues, see NEAEHL, loc. cit. 84. Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Baodesh, 11 (ed. Horowitz-Rabin, p. 243 = Lauterbach, II, p. 287); B Berakhot 6a; see also Y Berakhot 5, 1, 8d9a; PRK 5, 8 (p. 91); Seder Olam 15 (p. 64). On the Shekhinahs presence in rabbinic literature and in Matthew, see Sievers, Where Two or Three . . . , 17182. 85. B Shabbat 32a. On the term am ha-aretz, see below. 86. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 269; Naveh, Aramaic and Hebrew Inscriptions, 307.
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and comments that sought to enhance its religious and liturgical dimension. Immediately following the events of 70 c.e., R. Yoanan b. Zakkai issued a series of taqqanot aimed at transferring a number of Temple practices to this new setting.87 While some of these enactments were directed toward Jewish courts, and although the synagogue is never specically mentioned, it is the latter institution that was undoubtedly the primary beneciary. Blowing the shofar on Rosh Hashanah, using the lulav and ethrog during the seven-day Sukkot festival, and following the priestly practice of not wearing sandals when blessing the people all point to their implementation in a synagogue setting. How many synagogues responded to R. Yoanan b. Zakkais taqqanot is unknown. Some of his contemporaries might have viewed his innovations with alarm.88 The story of his outwitting the Sons of Bathyra regarding the blowing of the shofar on the Sabbath attests to the traditions intent to exemplify R. Yoanans cleverness.89 As it stands, however, the story not only demonstrates R. Yoanans success at handling the challenge to his authority, but also the opposition engendered by these measures. Some rabbinic traditions aimed at encouraging Jews to build synagogues in imitation of the Temple: One does not build the entrances to the synagogue except toward the east, as we nd with regard to the sanctuary [i.e., the Tabernacle], which was open toward the east, as is written: And those encamped before the Tabernacle toward the east, before the Tent of Meeting eastward [Num. 3:38]. One does not build them except on the highest point of the city, as it is written: at the height of . . . you will call [Prov. 1:21]. 90 Just as the Temple portals faced east and the Temple edice itself was located on the highest point along Jerusalems eastern ridge, towering above the biblical City of David, so one should build a synagogue entrance facing east at the highest point in a town. Whether intended to be descriptive or prescriptive, evidence shows that the guidelines delineated in this tradition were implemented only sporadically. While synagogues were often located on prominent sites in a city or village, more so in some than in others, the tradition that portals should face east found expression in only a handful of northern synagogues (Arbel, Maoz ayyim, orvat Sumaqa, and presumably Bet Shean [north] and Sepphoris) and in southern Judaean synagogues.91 The builders of most synagogues in Late Antiquity (i.e., the overwhelming majority of archaeological nds) were either unaware of this latter recommendation or ignored it.
87. M Rosh Hashanah 4, 14; M Sukkah 3, 12. On these enactments, see Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 10718; L. Levine, Judaism from the Destruction of Jerusalem, 13336. 88. On the opposition to R. Yoanan in a variety of areas, see Alon, Jews, Judaism and the Classical World, 31443. 89. B Rosh Hashanah 29b. 90. T Megillah 3, 2223 (p. 360). See also Lieberman, TK, V, 12001201; Fine, This Holy Place, 4149. 91. The southern Judaean synagogues include Eshtemoa, Susiya, Maon, orvat Anim, and perhaps orvat Rimmon (rst stage); see Amit, Architectural Plans, 635; idem, Synagogues, passim; NEAEHL, passim.
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Further links between the synagogue and Temple also nd expression in tannaitic literature. One tradition claims that a synagogue and its quorum of ten men would assure Gods attentiveness to Israel, and that this was similar in its eect to the recitation of the divine name in the Temple.92 Another is reected in a statement attributed to R. Judah. When prescribing what should not be done in a destroyed synagogue, this second-century sage invoked Lev. 26:31: and I will leave waste your sanctuaries. Just as a sanctuary (i.e., the Temple) retains its sanctity when in ruins, so, too, does a synagogue.93 Some time in the third or fourth century, the rabbis took additional steps to link these two institutions. Memories of the Temple cult were introduced into synagogue liturgy. Thus, it was claimed that the Amidah prayer was instituted, inter alia, to replace Temple sacrices (prayer was introduced instead of sacricesY Berakhot 4, 1, 7b; B Berakhot 26b), and numerous sources from the amoraic period make the claim that prayer, a substitute for sacrices, could serve as a means of atonement.94 About this time, the content of the Additional Amidah (Mussaf ) recited on Sabbaths and holidays had also changed. Whereas a selection from Deut. 32 (the Song of Moses) had reportedly been read earlier, the Mussaf Amidah now included recitation of the sacrices that used to be oered in the Temple.95 Finally, at some point in Late Antiquity, a supplementary Torah reading (maftir) from Numbers 29 was introduced, in which the sacrices of each holiday are enumerated.96 These last modications in synagogue liturgy take us one step further in demonstrating explicitly what always had been implicit when associating the synagogue with the Temple, and especially when transferring Temple practices to the synagogue setting. It was at this time that the synagogue itself began assuming a degree of sanctity. This idea was new to the Palestinian setting and was not always easily assimilated, even within rabbinic circles.97 An important source concerning the rabbinic view of synagogue sanctity is found in Mishnah Megillah, wherein a sequence of objects is placed in hierarchical order:
92. B Berakhot 6a. See also Y Berakhot 5, 1, 8d9a. 93. M Megillah 3, 3. See also Fine, Did the Synagogue Replace the Temple? 1826, 41. 94. B Berakhot 26a; SifreDeuteronomy 41 (p. 88); PRK 24, 19 (p. 377); Tanuma, Kora, 12; Tanuma, Ki Tavo, 1 (p. 23a). 95. B Rosh Hashanah 31a; Y Berakhot 4, 6, 8c. See also Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 98; J. Homan, Surprising History of Musaf Amidah, 4145; L. A. Homan, Canonization, 157. 96. Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 138. About this time (though precision here is impossible), the daily psalms once recited by the Levites in the Temple (M Tamid 7, 4) were now transferred to the synagogue setting (B Rosh Hashanah 31a; Tractate Soferim 18, 2 [pp. 31013]). See also Maharshen, Daily Psalm, 19899. 97. For a full discussion of the evolving sanctity of the synagogue in Late Antiquity, see Fine, This Holy Place, 35126. Cf., however, the remarks of A. Goldberg, Service of the Heart, 195211.
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When the people of the city sell their town square,98 they may only buy a synagogue with this money. If a synagogue [is sold], they may only buy a Torah chest. If a chest [is sold], they may only [buy] mantles for wrapping the scrolls. If the mantles [are sold], they may only buy [sacred] books [i.e., Prophets and Writings]. If the [sacred] books [are sold], they may only buy a Torah. However, if they sell a Torah, they may not buy [sacred] books; if [sacred] books [are sold], they may not buy mantles; if mantles [are sold], they may not buy a Torah chest; if a Torah chest [is sold], they may not buy a synagogue; if a synagogue [is sold], they may not buy a square. And so, too, with the remaining monies.99
The rst part of the above source lists places and objects in an ascending order of sacrality. Monies made from the sale of a less holy object must be used to acquire something more holy, but not vice versa. According to the Talmud, the sanctity of the square appears to be the opinion expressed by R. Menaem b. Yose.100 Thus, the synagogue is less holy than the objects it contains, objects that are all associated with the Torah scroll. It is clear from this list that the Torah scroll itself was considered the holiest object in the synagogue that bestowed degrees of sanctity on other objects, depending on how close to it they were in kind (i.e., other sacred books) or in physical proximity (e.g., mantles, chests, synagogue).101 This mishnah regarding the sanctity of a still-functioning synagogue stands in marked contrast to the following one, which oers a wide spectrum of opinions regarding this buildings status once it ceased to function as such:
A synagogue is sold only on the condition that, if they wish, they can return it [to its former status as a synagogue], says R. Meir. The sages say: If sold, it is sold forever [i.e., there can be no such condition], except that it may not then be used as a bathhouse, a tannery, a place of immersion, or a urinal. R. Judah says: They may sell it as a courtyard and the buyer may do with it as he pleases. 102
This mid second-century debate focuses on the option of reselling a synagogue building. It was unanimously agreed that such a transaction is legitimate; the only issue is whether there should be any restrictions. The more conservative R. Meir recommends a clause allowing its reclamation as a synagogue whenever desired; the sages stake out a more ex98. The public square acquired a modicum of sanctity since the Torah was occasionally read there: R. Yoanan said: This [mishnaic tradition is to be ascribed] to R. Menaem b. R. Yose, for R. Menaem b. R. Yose said: A town square has sanctity since they [sometimes] take out a Torah and read it publicly (Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d; see also M Taanit 2, 1). 99. M Megillah 3, 1. 100. See above, note 98. 101. Ironically, the special status of the Torah is also reected in the fast-day ceremony, for which the Torah scroll was taken into the public square. According to R. iyya bar Abba, this act was to demonstrate that the one precious item we have has been humiliated because of our sins (Y Taanit 2, 1, 65a). My thanks to David Levine for calling my attention to this source. 102. M Megillah 3, 2.
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ible position, allowing a permanent sale except in cases in which its new use would discredit the buildings former status. R. Judah, the most liberal of all, recommends that the building be regarded as a courtyard, allowing the buyer to do what he wishes with it. Note the contrasting positions between these traditions and those of several third-century rabbis (cited above) who would not allow stones from one synagogue to be moved and reused to build another synagogue. How dramatically the sacred status of the synagogue developed among the rabbis within the span of a century! 103 What caused this profound transformation of the synagogue from a principally communal institution into one with an increasingly distinct religious stamp? Was there an idea, an object, or a practice that served as a catalyst for this change? No source addresses this issue head on and thus certainty is elusive. Nevertheless, we can suggest a number of likely causes that are reected in various rabbinic traditions. We have noted the ways in which the synagogue had begun to emulate the Temple, which was regarded as the sacred Jewish institution par excellence. Was it this increasing identication with the Temple that bestowed sanctity on the synagogue? 104 Alternatively, was the reason for this transition the fact that the Torah scroll, the holiest object in the synagogue, now to be found on an increasingly permanent basis in the main hall of the building? The appearance of bimot, apses, and niches in third- and fourthcentury buildings clearly indicates this development (g. 19), and the presence of scrolls undoubtedly played a role in according an enhanced sanctity to the synagogue building itself. There is no better testimony to this fact than the diatribe of Chrysostom in one of his homilies against the Jews:
But since there are some who consider the synagogue to be a holy place, we must say a few things to them as well. Why do you revere this place when you should disdain it, despise it and avoid it? The Law and the books of the prophets can be found there, you say. What of it? You say, Is it not the case that the books make the place holy? Certainly not! This is the reason I especially hate the synagogue and avoid it, that they have the prophets but do not believe in them, that they read these books but do not accept their testimonies. . . . Therefore stay away from their gatherings and from their synagogues and do not praise the synagogue on account of its books. Rather, hate it and avoid it for that very reason, for they have mangled the saints because they do not believe their words and they accuse them of extreme impiety.105
103. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. See also A. Goldberg, Die Heiligkeit des Ortes, 2631. On the superiority of a number of extra-Temple religious practices over those associated with the Temple in amoraic literature, see Bokser, Rabbinic Responses to Catastrophe, 3761. 104. See, for example, M Megillah 4, 3. 105. John Chrysostom, Homily 1, 5, trans. in Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 9496. See also E. M. Meyers, Torah Shrine, 30338. Amoraic literatures preference for aron and not tevah when referring to the Torah chest is indicative of a change in perspective. The term aron carries with it very clear associations with the biblical ark containing the tablets with the Ten Commandments that was placed in the holiest precinct of the Tabernacle and then of the Temple. Later on, the Karaites attacked the Rabban-
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
19. Qatzrin synagogue, looking southwest. Note the bima along the southern wall.
Despite this poignant evidence from the late fourth century, it remains unclear whether the presence of scrolls was the pivotal factor in the evolving synagogue sanctity of late Roman Palestine.106
ites precisely because of this association; see Lieberman, Midreshei Teiman, 25. It is perhaps noteworthy that over a millennium earlier, it was the introduction into Jerusalem of the holy ark with the two stone tablets that David perceived as essential to granting the city its sacred status (II Samuel 6). Moreover, the sanctity of the Torah is reected in the dramatic account of Levi b. Sisi (early third century), who, upon the approach of Roman soldiers to his town, took a Torah scroll in hand, climbed onto a roof, and exclaimed: Master of the universe, if I have ignored one word in this Torah scroll, let them [the soldiers] enter; if not, have them leave (Y Taanit 3, 8, 66d). Compare this to the use of a Torah scroll by Joshua son of Sapphias, in rst-century Tiberias (Josephus, Life 13435), who accused Josephus of betraying the city. The process of introducing the Torah scrolls into the synagogue on a permanent basis was a long one. From the extant, though limited, evidence, it is rather clear that pre-70 synagogues did not have any bimot or aediculae, and the Torah would have been brought into the hall for reading and then removed. By the third and fourth centuries, a permanent installation was becoming more common, and by the end of Late Antiquity, it was almost a universal xture. See, for example, T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360); B Sotah 39b; below, Chap. 9. 106. As argued in Fine, This Holy Place; see also Lightstone, Commerce of the Sacred, 104. On the sanc-
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Several other possibilities also present themselves. We have noted above with regard to the synagogues orientation that, in rabbinic sources at least, prayer was becoming an ever more signicant element in Jewish liturgy of Late Antiquity. The synagogues orientation toward Jerusalem from the third century onward clearly reects an enhanced connection with the holy city that could plausibly be linked to the requirement to face Jerusalem during prayer. Thus, the growing role of congregational prayer in the synagogue liturgy may well have contributed to the buildings heightened sanctity.107 It is also possible that this newly emerging status of Palestinian synagogues was inuenced in some way by Diaspora models. We have seen with regard to the synagogues sanctity that the Diaspora preceded Palestine by centuries. Already before 70, many Diaspora synagogues were not only a place for Torah reading, as in its Palestinian counterpart, but also a setting for public prayer, and at times were considered sacred space.108 Several early examples of Diaspora synagogue architecture, at Delos and Ostia, may indicate a rst- or second-century c.e. orientation toward Jerusalem. Might such Diaspora models have helped shape, through channels as yet unknown to us, the later Palestinian one? On the basis of the sources available, however, it is well nigh impossible to ascertain which of the above was the pivotal factor in the synagogues transformation in status and role in late Roman Palestine. It is quite probable that the change was not due to any one of the above-mentioned factors, but rather to a combination of some, or perhaps all, of them. Moreover, the subsequent Byzantine era was to contribute further to a signicant increase in synagogue sanctity (see below, Chap. 7). Although we have noted the extent of rabbinic support for viewing the synagogue in a new religious light, particularly with regard to the Temple, an important caveat is in order; it appears that not all sages were comfortable with the idea that the synagogue and its practices should resemble those of the Temple. One tannaitic tradition often quoted in the Bavli oers the following words of caution: One should not make a house in the likeness of the Sanctuary; nor an exedra in the likeness of the Temple porch [ ,]nor a courtyard like the [ i.e., the Temple courtyard], nor a table like the [Temple] table, nor a menorah like the [Temple] menorah. Rather, one may make [a menorah] of ve, six, or eight [branches], but one of seven he shall not make. 109 Sages subscribing to such a
tity of the Torah scroll and its use as a magical object in medieval and modern Jewry, see Sabar, Torah and Magic, 14979 (Hebrew). 107. For the emphasis on public prayer, see, for example, B Berakhot 32b; Tanuma, Ki Tavo, 1 (p. 23a); Pirqei de Rabbi Eliezer 5 (= Seder Eliyahu Zuta 23 [p. 42]). On the comparison of a prayer leader with one who oers a sacrice, see Y Berakhot 4, 4, 8b; Genesis Rabbah 49, 23 (pp. 5067). Cf., however, Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 35051. See also Bokser, Rabbinic Responses, 4757; Fine, This Holy Place, 6267; Z. Safrai, Communal Functions, 200; Urman, House of Assembly and the House of Study, 23536. 108. See above, Chap. 4; as well as Goodman, Sacred Space, 116. 109. B Rosh Hashanah 24ab; B Avodah Zarah 43a; B Menaot 28b; Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 20:20 (pp. 41011); Blidstein, Prostration and Mosaics, 22.
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tradition clearly preferred to maintain a distinction between synagogue and Temple, an emphasis quite dierent fromthough not necessarily contradictory tothat reected in the above-noted sources, which clearly attempted to create physical and psychological ties between the two institutions. The many archaeological nds of seven-branched menorot from Late Antiquity, including a number of three-dimensional ones, indicate that many communities did not subscribe to (or perhaps did not know of ) these rabbinic restrictions.110 It is also possiblethough dicult to substantiatethat the above prohibition may reect the attitudes prevalent between 70 and 135, when the hopes of the more messianically inclined were still riding high regarding the imminent restoration of the Temple.111 The issue of imitating Temple practices gave rise to disagreements in other realms as well. Apparently, several second-century Galilean rabbis tried to conduct fast-day ceremonies as they were once carried out in the Temple:
It once happened in the days of R. alafta and R. anania b. Teradion that someone led services and completed the entire benediction, and no one responded Amen (this being the case in the Temple as well). [The azzan called out:] Blow [the shofar], priests, blow. [He recited:] He who answered our father Abraham on Mt. Moriah, He will answer you and will listen to the voice of your cries this day. [The azzan then said:] Blow, sons of Aaron, blow. [He then continued to recite:] He who answered our fathers in the Sea of Reeds, He will answer you and listen to the voice of your cries this day. When the report [of what had happened] came before the sages, they said: We would not have acted thusly except at the eastern gate on the Temple Mount. 112
The more expanded Tosefta version adds that R. alafta instituted this practice at Sepphoris and R. anania b. Teradion in Sikhni (or Sikhnin).113 It appears that these two sages were attempting to perpetuate Temple practices, although it is unclear just which component(s) of this ceremony constituted a continuation: omitting the response Amen, thereby according priests a central role in the ritual; reciting these particular prayers; or prostrating oneself in the prayer setting.114 The aversion of other sages to perpetuating
110. Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 23656. See also Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 7198; Sperber, History of the Menorah, 13559; Negev, Chronology, 193210; L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah, 13153. It may be signicant that the above-noted prohibition was preserved in the Bavli and not in the Yerushalmi. Might this indicate that the Palestinian amoraim did not object to such representations or that they saw no reason to do so in light of the popular practice? 111. This line of reasoning nds interesting corroboration on a half-dozen lamps from southern Judaea dating between 70 and 135 c.e. on which the menorah is displayed. Of these, ve have more than seven branches (Sussman, Ornamental Jewish Oil-Lamps, nos. 16). 112. M Taanit 2, 5. 113. T Taanit 1, 14 (pp. 32728) for this and other variations. See also Lieberman, TK, V, 1075. 114. On prostration at fast-day ceremonies, see Y Avodah Zarah 4, 43d; B Megillah 22a; and comments in Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 11922; Blidstein, Prostration and Mosaics, 3436.
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one or more of these customs in all probability stemmed from the desire to clearly dierentiate between Temple and synagogue practice.115 Thus, from the various traditions cited above, it would seem that while there was general consensus within rabbinic circles over the synagogues sanctity, there was less agreement as to the institutions precise status, degree of sanctity, and extent of identication with the Temple. This issue engaged many Jewish communities as well, although it is not clear to what extent or intensity. Steps were gradually being taken in various locales throughout the country to steer the synagogue toward sanctication, and it is in the third century that we see the rst traces of this process as manifested in building orientation and the presence of sacred objects. The change was indeed a giant step from what the synagogue had been in the pre-70 era, yet still a far cry from what would evolve in subsequent centuries. In what appears to be a quintessentially elegant formulation reecting the ambiguity of the synagogues new role and the ambivalence in identifying it with the Temple, the third-century R. Samuel b. R. Isaac dened the synagogue as a , a diminished or small sanctuary.116 This formulation gives eloquent expression to the ambiguity. There was indeed something sacred about the synagogue; it was comparable to the .Yet, it was only a replica of sorts, whose status was not to be confused with that of the Jerusalem Temple itself. In reality, it was diminishedsomething less than the Temple, not quite as sacred, not quite as special.
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and Baram had several such buildings. Some synagogues were named after the professions of their founders or leading members, such as the Tarsian synagogues in Lydda;118 others were named after a town or city, presumably the place of origin of those who founded the synagogue, as, for example, those of the Alexandrians, Cyrenians, Cilicians, and Asians in pre-70 Jerusalem and those of Gophna, Babylonia, Sidon, Tyre, and perhaps Cappadocia attested in Sepphoris.119 A synagogue may have been named after a section of a city, such as the Kifra and ammat synagogues in Tiberias.120 One Tiberian synagogue was named Boule, whether because boule members founded it and dominated its aairs, the building was located near the citys boule, or the building itself was (or had once been) the meeting place of the citys boule.121 Finally, a synagogue may have been named because of its antiquity (the Old Synagogue or Sarugnaia, south of Tiberias), size (the Large or Great Synagogue of Sepphoris), or a historical event (the Synagogue of [the] Rebellion in Caesarea).122 In addition to the above, some individual anonymous synagogues are mentioned in connection with specic communities, such as Maon and Migdal near Tiberias, and Sikhnin, Caesarea, Lydda, Tivon, Bet Shean, En Gedi, and Bostra.123 We also read in rabbinic literature of synagogues that catered to Greek-speaking communities, presumportedly boasted at least thirty synagogues, which were destroyed in the major earthquake of 749 c.e.; see Avissar, Sefer Teveria, 92. On the dating of this earthquake, see Tsafrir and Foerster, Dating of the Earthquake, 23135. Sepphoris: Y Kilaim 9, 4, 32b; Y Ketubot 12, 3, 35a; Ecclesiastes Rabbah 7:11; but cf. reservations of Miller, in On the Number of Synagogues, 5963. Lydda: Y Sheqalim 5, 6, 49b; Y Peah 8, 21b. 118. Leviticus Rabbah 26:3 (pp. 83031); B Nazir 53a. 119. Jerusalem: T Megillah 2, 17 (pp. 35253)Alexandrians; Y Megillah 3, 1, 73dCyrenians; B Megillah 26aCilicians; Acts 6:9Asians, Cilicians, Cyrenians, and Alexandrians. Sepphoris: Y Berakhot 3, 6a; Y Nazir 7, 1, 56aGophna; Y Sanhedrin 10, 1, 28a; Y Shabbat 6, 8a; Y Berakhot 5, 1, 9a; Genesis Rabbah 33, 3 (p. 305); PRK 25 (p. 381); see also Y Yoma 7, 5, 44b; Y Megillah 4, 5, 75b; and, for medieval evidence, Goitein, Mediterranean Society, II, 167Babylonia; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 10510 Sidon, Tyre; Y Sheviit 9, 5, 39aCappadocia. 120. Kifra: Y Megillah 1, 1, 70a; Pesiqta Rabbati, Supplement B (p. 196b). ammat Tiberias: Y Sotah 1, 4, 16d. 121. Y Sheqalim 7, 3, 50c; Y Taanit 1, 2, 64a. Cf. S. Klein, Galilee, 99. 122. : Y Kilaim 9, 32c; Leviticus Rabbah 22:4 (p. 511). : PRK 18, 5 (p. 297). : Y Bikkurim 3, 3, 65d; Y Sanhedrin 1, 1, 18a; Y Nazir 7, 1, 56a; Midrash on Samuel 6 (p. 34b); Numbers Rabbah 12, 3. A similar phenomenon may be noted in Bursa (Turkey), where a synagogue was named Gerush (lit., exile), after the Spanish exiles who founded it. As noted in Chaps. 4 and 8, the community in Rome used names for synagogues in each of the categories listed and also after leading historical gures. 123. Maon: B Yevamot 64b; B Shabbat 139a; B Zevaim 118b; see also Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a; B ullin 97a. Migdal: Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. Sikhnin: Y Megillah 4, 5, 75b. Caesarea: B Yevamot 65b. Lydda: Y Sheqalim 5, 6, 49b; Y Peah 8, 9, 21b; Leviticus Rabbah 35, 12 (pp. 83031). Tivon: T Megillah 2, 5 (p. 349); Y Megillah 4, 1, 74c. Bet Shean: Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a. En Gedi: Lewis, Documents from the Bar-Kokhba Period, 8485. Bostra: B Shabbat 29b.
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ably located in Palestine, such as the one in Caesarea, where members did not know enough Hebrew to recite even the most basic of prayers, the Shema.124 A number of synagogues in Roman Palestine were organized around particular social constituencies, a practice to which the rabbis objected. Undoubtedly, Jewish-Christian communities had their own places of worship, although we know next to nothing about them.125 Rabbinic traditions exhibit particular hostility to ammei ha-aretz and their synagogues. This term had borne a series of meanings since biblical times, often strikingly dierent from one period to another.126 While any consensus regarding the meaning of the term in the second and third centuries is illusive, it appears to have referred to a large segment of non-rabbinic Jewish society, at whom the rabbis took umbrage on the grounds that their religious observance was unacceptable and their study of the Torah inadequate. The sages identied certain synagogues with these Jews and referred to these places in pejorative terms. In one tradition, the rst-century R. Dosa b. Hyrcanus equates sitting in their synagogues with behavior such as sleeping in the morning, drinking wine in the afternoon, and engaging in childrens talk takes one out of this world. 127 As noted above, the second-century source attributed to R. Ishmael b. Elazar is even more disdainful, claiming that the ammei ha-aretz deserve to die because they call the holy ark arana and the synagogue bet am.128 It is hard to explain the reason for such hostility to what appears to be mildly deviant behavior by rabbinic norms;129 death is not a light curse. Obviously, there is much more to R. Ishmaels attitude toward am ha-aretz than meets the eye. Unfortunately, however, there is little more to go on, although we have already noted that several communities (in Dura Europos and Naveh) did, in fact, refer to their ark as an arana or bet arana. Thus, R. Ishmaels objections were not at all theoretical, and his contempt was similar to that felt at times by other intellectual and religious elites toward the unschooled and unso124. T Megillah 3, 13 (p. 356); Y Sotah 7, 1, 21b. On Greek culture in Caesarea, see Geiger, Voices Reciting the Shma in Greek, 2736. 125. See Visotzky, Fathers of the World, 12949; Saldarini, Gospel of Matthew, 2627; A. Baumgarten, Literary Evidence for Jewish Christianity, 50. On Jewish Christianity in rabbinic literature generally, see the important remarks of Visotzky, op. cit., 12949. With regard to the seven synagogues on Mt. Zion in the time of Aelia Capitolina, as reported by the Bordeaux Pilgrim (333 c.e.), which presumably belonged to Jewish Christians, see Taylor, Christians and Holy Places, 21020; cf. Mimouni, La synagogue judo-chrtienne, 21534. 126. See Oppenheimer, Am Ha-aretz, passim; L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 11217, and the literature cited therein; Viviano, Study as Worship, 4243. 127. M Avot 3, 10. The reading in a number of MSS (Kaufman, Parma, and the Genizah fragments) amounts to basically the same thing. See my Rabbinic Class, 114. 128. B Shabbat 32a; Midrash Hagadol, Genesis 25:24 (p. 439). 129. The rabbis also urged one another never to sit with these people (B Berakhot 47a) and not to associate with them in any manner (B Pesaim 49b).
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phisticated masses. Such an attitude was widespread among the intelligentsia of antiquity and held true for pagans and Christians no less than for Jews.130 We have no way of assessing how widespread the synagogues of ammei ha-aretz were. It may be that they were quite well known and were perhaps even more reective of what was generally taking place than those synagogues following rabbinic dicta. Here and there in rabbinic writings we nd other expressions of the sages unhappiness with, and objections to, various synagogue practices. For instance, they would exclude laborers from leading services and from participating in the priestly blessing (although the reasons for doing so are unclear), and they objected to inappropriately dressed prayer leaders and the inclusion of certain additions to the service that they considered sectarian.131 The steps that the rabbis advocated against a range of sectarians are well known. The introduction into the daily prayer of references to Jewish Christians and other heresies considered dangerous was a signicant move.132 Rabbinic involvement in implementing this innovation is explicitly documented;133 what is unclear is whether they were taking the lead in initiating something entirely new or merely perpetuatingand further developingan already existing breach.134 Clearly, the rabbis could beand often werequite judgmental of their surroundings. They would record what they liked and either criticize or ignore what displeased them. The reality of ancient synagogues, their forms, practices, and organization, is a subject far wider than rabbinic sources permit us to see. While this corpus is of enormous value with regard to the subject at hand, it is also restricted in scope and tendentious in outlook, touching only on limitedalbeit importantaspects of the topic. It behooves us to be aware of these limitations.
130. See MacMullen, Paganism, 8 and nn. 3336. 131. Leading services: T Berakhot 2, 9 (pp. 78). Priestly blessing: B Berakhot 16a. See the explanation of Rashi, loc. cit. The rabbis often looked askance at such workers (see Ayali, Workers and Artisans, 95 97), and tensions appear to have been mutual; see Genesis Rabbah 65, 15 (p. 728); and the comments of S. Klein, Galilee, 1078. See also S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 19496. Inappropriate dress: M Megillah 4, 8. Sectarian prayer additions: M Berakhot 5, 3; M Megillah 4, 89. 132. Regarding references to Christians specically in the synagogues, see John 9:22; 12:42; 16:2; Epiphanius, Panarion 29, 9, 2. 133. B Berakhot 28b29a. See Kimelman, Birkat Ha-Minim, 22644; Katz, Issues in the Separation of Judaism and Christianity, 6376. See also Kalmin, Christians and Heretics, 15569. 134. See Lieberman, TK, I, 5354; Flusser, Jewish Religion, 2324.
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BYZANTINE PALESTINE
yzantine Palestine (fourth to seventh centuries) not only witnessed the continued evolution and development of the synagogue, but also provided a rich context in which to understand additional dimensions of this institution. Synagogue remains from this period exist in far greater numbers and in more geographical areas than do those from earlier periods. Indeed, this period constitutes a peak in synagogue development, which is reected in its architectural, artistic, and epigraphic remains. The synagogue building acquired an ever more distinctive religious character, and synagogue liturgy continued to expand, becoming more elaborate and varied. These changes were not merely a continuation of the past. A new element entered Byzantine Palestine at this time that not only aected the climate of Jewish life generally, but also had a signicant inuence on the synagogue, its appearance, status, and modus operandi. This new element was Christianity, whose dramatically expanding presence in Palestine from the fourth century onward impacted profoundly on Jewish life.1 At worst, it was a disruptive, threatening, and at times destructive force, while at best, it was a stimulating and fructifying one. By the latter part of the fourth century, and with increasing frequency in the fth and sixth centuries, Jews, Judaism, and the synagogue were being assaulted on a number of fronts throughout the Empire. Church legislation attacked Jews and Jewish practices,
1. See L. Levine, Between Rome and Byzantium, 748.
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Imperial edicts became more restrictive, and Christian preachers fulminated against a religion and people they regarded as anachronistic, loathsome, and rejected by God. On occasion, mobs were incited against the Jews, resulting in damage, loss of lives, and either the desecration or outright destruction of synagogues.2 Imperial legislation was invoked on a regular basis to try and prevent such destruction.3 In some cases, Christians appropriated synagogues and converted them into churches, for example, in Stobi, Gerasa, and Apamea according to archaeological remains, and in Callinicum, Ravenna, and elsewhere in Italy, Mauretania, Spain, Gaul, Syria, and Minorca per our literary sources.4 Nevertheless, despite this litany of anti-Jewish words and deeds, we have become well aware that sermons were often not heeded nor legislation always enforced. Despite ocial restrictions, the Jews of Byzantine Palestine continued to build synagogues (e.g., Merot, Capernaum, Bet Alpha, southern Judaea), repair those already standing (e.g., Maoz ayyim, ammat Tiberias, ammat Gader, En Gedi), and entirely rebuild and refurbish others after a period of abandonment and disrepair (Nevoraya). In many instances, it was at this time (i.e., the sixth and seventh centuries) that a synagogue building reached its greatest dimensions (e.g., ammat Tiberias, En Gedi, Nevoraya, orvat Rimmon, ammat Gader). In several regions (e.g., the Golan), many synagogues were erected where few, if any, seem to have existed beforehand.
2. Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, II, 2079; III, 418; Parkes, Conict of the Church and the Synagogue, 16395, 26369; Simon, Verus Israel, 20233; Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 20831; H. H. Ben-Sasson, Trial and Achievement, 312. 3. The earliest such legislation was in evidence in 393 c.e. (Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 9 [Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 190]) and continued in 397 (16, 8, 12 [19798]), 412 (16, 8, 20 [26265]), 420 (16, 8, 21 [28386]), and 423 (16, 8, 25 [28789]). See also the law from 438 c.e. (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 323.). That such legislation was often ineective is clear not only from the need to reissue protective laws, but also from the numerous cases of synagogue destruction. Incidents are reported to have occurred in Rome, Constantinople, Edessa, Sicily, Sardinia, North Africa, Alexandria, Antioch, and northern Italy. See Parkes, Conict of the Church and the Synagogue, 187, 21214, 23638, 25051. In Palestine as well it is reported that the early fth century witnessed the destruction of synagogues and temples as Barsauma and some forty other monks went on a rampage that supposedly lasted several years (ibid., 230). See also Simon, Verus Israel, 225; Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 218; and below, Chap. 8. On the destruction of pagan shrines by zealous Christians, see Trombley, Hellenic Religion and Christianization, I, 123., 207., 342.; Liebeschuetz, Antioch, 23739. On the other hand, Imperial restrictions on the building of synagogues were often not implemented, as was the case later on, in the Middle Ages, under Islamic rule (Assis, Synagogues in Medieval Spain, 8). 4. Juster, Les Juifs, I, 464 n. 3; Parkes, Conict of the Church and the Synagogue, 16668, 187, 2047, 22529, 244, 263; Simon, Verus Israel, 22529; Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 21820; Bradbury, Severus of Minorca, 30, 2 (p. 123) and 130 n. 25. On the conversion of temples into churches, see Trombley, Hellenic Religion and Christianization, I, 108., 123.; II, 377.; R. Cormack, Temple as the Cathedral, 7588. There were also instances where attempts were made to protect Jewish rights and synagogues, as was the case with Gregory and the Terracinan Jewish community; see Katz, Pope Gregory, 12022. For a recent overview, see T. Braun, Jews in the Late Roman Empire, 14271.
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On the periphery of Judaea (to the east and west, and especially in the southern region), a dozen or so synagogues have been discovered to date.5 Given Hadrians prohibition of Jewish settlement around Jerusalem,6 the extensive destruction in Judaea in the aftermath of the Bar-Kokhba revolt, and the strong Galilean focus in rabbinic literature, the number of Judaean synagogues found to date is indeed surprising. However, the most unexpected discoveries have been in the Golan, where the bulk of the twenty-ve synagogues exposed to date ourished in the Byzantine era.7 As noted above on several occasions, the overwhelming majority of synagogues excavated in Palestine date to the Byzantine period. Most were built at that time, but even those constructed earlierwith the exception of the handful of pre-70 structurescontinued to function throughout most, if not all, of this period.8 The very existence of Byzantine synagogue remains at well over one hundred sites has been one of two main catalysts in reassessing Jewish life in this historical period. Since the beginning of Jewish historiography in the nineteenth century, this era was considered the dawn of the Dark Ages for the Jews of Palestine. Jewish life was then viewed as being in steady decline after the destruction of the Temple in the rst century. Crises in subsequent centuries served only to exacerbate this trend: the failure of the Bar-Kokhba revolt and Hadrians persecutions in the second century; the Empire-wide anarchy and instability of the third; the rise of Christianity and the beginning of anti-Jewish legislation in the fourth; and, nally, the disappearance of the Patriarchate in the fth.9 Even the edited form of the Yerushalmi, which appears both partial and hasty, especially when compared to its more polished Babylonian counterpart, has usually been interpreted as an indication of the sudden closure of this enterprise in the face of impending disaster.10 Therefore, to nd that Jews throughout the Byzantine era were building synagogues everywhere, often on a grand and imposing scale, requires a major reevaluation of this period.11
5. Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 254321, which also includes a number of dubious identications, and Amit, Synagogues, 6588. 6. Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 4, 6, 4; Justin, Dialogue with Trypho 16; idem, First Apology 47; Schrer, History, I, 55355. 7. Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 61113; Maoz, Art and Architecture of the Synagogues of the Golan, 98115; idem, Golan, 53845; Hachlili, Late Antique Jewish Art from the Golan, 183212. Cf., however, the assumption of an earlier, late Roman date for some synagogue sites by Urman (Golan, 80116; Gregg and Urman, Jews, Pagans and Christians, 30510). 8. The Second Temple synagogues that never survived the revolt of 66 are excluded. 9. See, for example, Graetz, History of the Jews, II, 559.; Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, II, 17275, 20914; Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 275. 10. Ginzberg, On Jewish Law and Lore, 2429. 11. A caveat is in place here. It must be remembered that it is usually the latest stratum of archaeological remains that is best preserved, often obliterating, partially or entirely, earlier strata. Thus, impressive remains of Byzantine synagogues do not mean, ipso facto, that similar buildings did not already exist in
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20. Aerial view of the Capernaum synagogue, looking northeast. The courtyard lies to the east.
The synagogue at Capernaum (g. 20) is the most striking example of the revised perception of this period as one also characterized by relative stability, and at times even remarkable prosperity, for the Jews. This monumental and ornate building was completed in the plan as we know it today only in the latter part of the fth (or perhaps sixth) century, i.e., well into the Byzantine era.12 The buildings prominence was enhanced by the articially raised podium on which it stood, dwarng the nearby Church of St. Peter, which was also built at this time.13 A second catalyst in re-evaluating this era is based on documents from the Cairo Genizah, some of which were formerly dated to the early Middle Ages but are now acknowledged to have been written in the Byzantine era. Moreover, several new literary genres once thought to have been the products of later centuriesalso rst appeared in Late Antiquity: synagogue poetrythe piyyutoriginated in Palestine between the fourth
the earlier, Roman, era. Moreover, as we will discuss below (Chap. 9), the use of spolia (i.e., material from earlier structures) later on may attest to similar structures beforehand. 12. The earlier, fth-century date has been suggested by Corbo, Cafarnao, 11369, the later sixth century one by Magness, Question of the Synagogue, 1826. See also Chap. 9. 13. Corbo, House of St. Peter, 1618. See Brent, Die Christianisierung, 1528.
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and sixth centuries; the earliest aggadic midrashim were edited then; the Hekhalot mystical traditions began crystallizing at this time; a number of apocalyptic works were composed in the early seventh century; and many targumic traditions took shape from the fourth century onward.14 Thus, synagogue nds, together with Genizah material, have led to a serious reassessment of the Byzantine era. This period is now accorded a far dierent appraisal than that which was common earlier; it was not a post-Classical era of decline, but one that generated new forms and institutions, as well as new cultural and spiritual foci, while, at the same time, sustaining many traditions and institutions from the past.15 Many Palestinian cities, though perhaps less lavishly ornamented than their precursors, reached an apogee of physical growth precisely during Byzantine rule; the total number of settlements (villages, towns, and cities) increased signicantly and, in general, the eastern Mediterranean world ourished.16 The earlier picture of a cultural wasteland characterized by political decline and economic decay should now be replaced by a very dierentand more nuancedunderstanding of this era.
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synagogue types that were being either built or refurbished at this time. Merot, Nevoraya, Chorazim, and Capernaum were constructed between the fourth and sixth centuries following a Galilean model; broadhouse-type synagogues were being built in the third to fth centuries (Susiya, Eshtemoa, Maon, orvat Anim, orvat Rimmon, and perhaps ammat Tiberias, Yaa, and Kefar ananiah as well); and a variety of buildings, all more or less under Galilean inuence, began appearing in the Byzantine Golan.19 A striking example of this diversity among synagogues is evident in the Bet Shean area. To date, we know of ve contemporaneous synagogue buildings that functioned in the sixth century in this region.20 To date, no other urban setting boasts such a concentration of remains having not only geographical but also chronological propinquity. The synagogues referred to are Bet Shean A, just north of the city wall; Bet Shean B, near the southwestern city gate; Bet Alpha, to the west; Maoz ayyim, to the east; and Reov, to the south. Although these buildings functioned at the same time, they are, in fact, remarkably dierent from one another in a variety of ways. Let us compare three aspects of these buildings: architectural plan, art, and inscriptions (i.e., language and culture). Architectural Plan. Three of these buildings (Bet Shean A, Bet Alpha, and Maoz ayyim in its later stages) are apsidal basilicas; Reov is a basilica-type building, but with a raised bima at its southern end anked by two side rooms; Bet Shean B is a kind of chapel or prayer rooma simple, almost square room, possibly with a niche (of which little remains) in the direction of Jerusalem. Reov and Bet Alpha have a narthex in the north; Bet Shean A has auxiliary rooms on a number of sides, however no narthex has been recovered; and Maoz ayyim has a side entrance and no narthex. The most stunning variation, and indeed a striking exception to the norm at Bet Shean and elsewhere, is the orientation of Bet Shean A. This building faces northwest; i.e., its apse points in this direction while its entrances face southeast. Various theories have been suggested to explain this apparent deviation, ranging from its being a Samaritan synagogue 21 or some kind of sectarian building, based on the congregations aversion to ori-
19. Maoz, Art and Architecture of the Synagogues of the Golan, 98115; and above, note 7. 20. Chiat, Handbook of Synagogue Architecture, 12144; idem, Synagogue and Church Architecture, 624; Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 169.; and, for specic sites, Httenmeister and Reeg, Antiken Synagogen; NEAEHL. See also Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, nos. 49. For a recent presentation of the Reov ndings, see Vitto, Interior Decoration, 29397. 21. Whether this building is a Jewish or a Samaritan synagogue has been a subject of controversy for years. The excavator Zori (Ancient Synagogue at Beth-Shean, 73) posits a Jewish identication of this building, while Httenmeister and Reeg (Antiken Synagogen, II, 57475) and Foerster (Ancient Synagogues of the Galilee, 313; cf. also NEAEHL, I, 234) argue for a Samaritan identication; a noncommittal position is espoused by Naveh (On Stone and Mosaic, 7677). See also Chiat, Handbook of Synagogue Architecture, 13132; Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 18081. The Samaritan identication stems primarily from a Samaritan inscription, i.e., one written in the palaeo-Hebraic script used exclusively by the
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enting the synagogue southward, toward Tel Bet Shean and its pagan temples and later Byzantine church. However, it is also possible that too much has been made of this apparent deviation. Then, as now, there may have been all sorts of extenuating circumstances (e.g., topography or the particular layout of the plot of land) that induced the founders to so position the building. Whatever the reason, this building shares many characteristics with other known synagogues, and even its northwestern orientation has been duplicated by the recently discovered Sepphoris synagogue, which also faces in this direction.22 Moreover, other synagogues display a variety of deviations from the generally accepted Jerusalem orientation; thus, the perceived uniqueness of this synagogues orientation has become somewhat attenuated over the years.23 Art. The artistic representation in the Bet Shean synagogues is about as broad as one could imagine, ranging from strictly conservative to strikingly liberal. At the former end of the spectrum stands the Reov building, in which the only decorations are of a geometSamaritans at this time, which was discovered in a side room of the building. However, since this room may be an addition to the original structure, the signicance of the Samaritan inscription remains unclear. Jacoby (Responses, 13031) has added two further considerations in favor of this being a Samaritan synagogue: the absence of animal gures in the panel depicting the Torah shrine (especially when the decorations are compared to those in the nearby Bet Alpha synagogue, which was executed by the same artisans) and the absence of the lulav and ethrog. Both, she claims, reect Samaritan beliefs. The rst claim, however, is questionable, as panels depicting religious symbols in many Jewish synagogues (e.g., ammat Tiberias) are also devoid of gural representation. Thus, other than indicating congregational preference, the absence of gures in this particular context proves very little. However, her second point, the absence of the lulav and ethrog, is more persuasive. Samaritans interpret the biblical reference to the four species (Lev. 23:3944) as parts of the sukkah and not four separate items (which was the Jews interpretation). Thus, their absence as independent items in Samaritan art is not surprising, and we may well have here a distinctively Samaritan feature. Still and all, a Samaritan identication is inconclusive, and the latest excavations at el-Khirbe and Khirbet Samara by Magen (Samaritan Synagogues [Eng.], 193230) have even further beclouded the issue. The newly discovered mosaic oors from these two Samaritan synagogues are quite dierent from the Bet Shean A panel. For example, at Bet Shean two menorot ank the ark, a parokhet (curtain) covers a portal and not an ark, and the parokhet is not gathered to one side, while a symmetrical display of a shofar and incense shovel is found alongside the menorot. None of these features is duplicated in these Samaritan buildings, but they are characteristic of many Jewish synagogues. This Bet Shean synagogue will thus be included in the discussion, albeit with some reservations. In any case, neither its inclusion nor its exclusion will aect the overall picture of diversity, sinceorientation asidethis building does not represent an extreme example of Jewish architectural, artistic, or cultural tendencies among the Bet Shean synagogues. The unusual orientation of this building is irrelevant to the present discussion. The Samaritans, too, seem to have been equally as concerned with their synagogues orientation. The northwesterly direction presents problems in either case. 22. Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption, 1213. 23. See below, Chap. 9. See also Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 26; Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 180 82; NEAEHL, loc. cit.; Chiat, Handbook of Synagogue Architecture, 12832.
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21. Mosaic oor of the prayer room in Bet Shean B. Note the menorah in the center.
ric nature, except for one plaster fragment depicting the facade of a building (the Ark of the Covenant?) and a menorah.24 In the Bet Shean A synagogue, the geometric patterns on several panels are complemented by one containing a facade (probably referring to the Temple) anked by pairs of menorot, shofarot, and incense shovels. The Maoz ayyim synagogue also features geometric patterns, several representations of birds, and a few religious symbols. The mosaic oor in the prayer room of the Bet Shean B synagogue, with its inhabited scrolls, features gural representations of animals along with an elaborate oral motif (g. 21). This prayer chapel and a large room nearby appear to have shared a common courtyard, leading many to assume that these rooms were part of either a large synagogue complex or a wealthy individuals home that contained a prayer room. If the latter, this setting might have been similar to the one in Stobi,25 where Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos designated part of his house as a synagogue for the local Jewish community. If one accepts this interpretation, then these two sites would exemplify what rabbinic literature refers to as the synagogue of an individual. 26 The mosaic oor of the nearby large room in Bet Shean B is most unusual. One of its panels features scenes from Homers Odyssey, while a second depicts the god of the Nile together with Nilotic motifs (i.e., a series of animals and sh) and a symbolic representation of Alexandria with its customary Nilome-
24. See Vitto, Interior Decoration, 29396. 25. See below, Chap. 8. 26. Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a.
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22. Central panel in the Bet Alpha mosaic oor depicting the four seasons, zodiac signs, and Helios in the center.
ter. Between these two panels is a third one, containing a Greek dedicatory inscription naming one Leontis as the benefactor or owner of the building. Sharing the inclination of Bet Shean B and the nearby Leontis mosaic toward expansive artistic representation is the Bet Alpha synagogue, rich in its diversity, Jewish content, and pagan motifs. Its well-known mosaic oor contains three panels surrounded by geometric borders. One of the panels includes many of the same religious symbols appearing in Bet Shean A, although here birds ank the shrine (as do a lion and ox beside two inscriptions at the northern end of the pavement). The central panel depicts Helios, the zodiac signs, and the four seasons (g. 22), while a third panel illustrates the biblical narrative of the Binding of Isaac (Gen. 22). Although the same artisans, Marianos and his son anina, laid the mosaic oors at both Bet Alpha and Bet Shean A, the style and content at each location are strikingly dierent. Clearly, various types of pattern books were in circulation, leading to very dierent oor designs.
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23. Greek (upper) and Aramaic (lower) inscriptions from the Bet Alpha synagogue.
Thus, the oors of these ve contemporaneous Bet Shean synagogues exhibit a rich range of strictly aniconic patterns on the one hand to elaborate representations of Jewish and non-Jewish gural motifs on the other. Inscriptions. The linguistic and cultural ambience of the communities reected in inscriptions also varies widely.27 Not surprisingly, Reov is the most conservatively oriented synagogue, with almost exclusively Hebrew and Aramaic inscriptions. The inscription from Maoz ayyim contains only one Hebrew word, Shalom; Bet Shean A has a number of Greek inscriptions and a palaeo-Hebrew (Samaritan?) one, while Bet Shean B and Bet Alpha have Greek and Aramaic inscriptions (g. 23). The Aramaic inscription from Bet Alpha preserves the date of construction, i.e., the time of Justin, probably referring to Justin I (518527 c.e.). The Greek inscription at this site notes the names of the artisans Marianos and anina.28 The dierences between these communities cultural proclivities are no less striking than their dierences in languages. Not only did Reov avoid using Greek, but the contents of its inscriptions are quintessentially Jewish. As noted, fragmentary inscriptions found on the columns and walls appear to have been blessings for various occasions,29 and the monumental twenty-nine-line, 365-word mosaic inscription in the narthex is entirely halakhic in content (g. 24). A similar inscription (as yet unpublished) appears on one of the synagogues columns, making these two sui generis among synagogue epigraphical evidence anywhere. This stands in contrast with the Homeric and Alexandrian scenes on the Leontis oor or with the Helios and zodiac depictions from Bet Alpha. Moreover, the Bet Alpha mosaic presents an intriguing balance between Jewish motifs and those drawn from the surrounding culture. The zodiac panel was placed between two others bearing
27. For these inscriptions, see Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions. 28. Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, nos. 4, 5. 29. Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 18687.
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a distinctly Jewish stampone with religious symbols and the other with the Binding of Isaac narrative. Taken together with the Alexandrian and Homeric motifs of the Leontis mosaic, the Bet Shean B complex is in some ways the most hellenized of all these sites. In fact, an Aramaic inscription in the prayer room itself contains a number of linguistic mistakes that, according to Kutscher, most likely reect a highly acculturated stratum of Palestinian Jewry.30 There was signicant diversity among ancient synagogues outside of Bet Shean as well. This would have been especially true of synagogues in urban centers, which might have diered considerably from each other in their architectural style, language, and use of motifs, given their varying constituencies. Archaeological evidence from other urban centers, however, is sparse, and thus any comparisons with Bet Shean are almost impossible to draw. The remains of three buildings have been excavated in Tiberias: the famous Severus synagogue excavated in 196163, another one excavated by Slousch in 1921, and a third excavated by Berman and On in 1989. While the latter two are either poorly documented or poorly preserved, the few nds there seem to indicate that these buildings differed in plan, decoration, and other features.31 Similarly with regard to Sepphoris. Aside
30. Kutscher, Language, 5760. 31. NEAEHL, II, 57477; Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 13943, 14647.
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from the recently discovered synagogue, with its mosaic oor rich in artistic motifs and inscriptions, we know of only one fth-century Greek inscription that was originally in a synagogue, probably located in another part of the city. It speaks of leaders from several communities in Phoenicia who settled in the city.32 Finally, only one synagogue has been excavated in Caesarea, although a number of inscriptions, as well as rabbinic sources relating to local synagogues, may point to others there as well.33 Even in the Jericho area there seem to have been striking dierences between neighboring synagogues. One local sixth-century synagogue had demonstrably aniconic decorations, featuring geometric patterns and a stylized ark. Yet, several kilometers away and at about the same time, Naaran boasted a zodiac design, a representation of the biblical Daniel, and an assortment of animal depictions (g. 25). Both synagogues, however, contained only Aramaic or Hebrew inscriptions; Greek was not in evidence. The Golan synagogues also reect a variety of attitudes toward gural art, as do Galilean-type buildings.34
32. Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 24. 33. Ibid., nos. 2529; L. Levine, Synagogue Ocials; idem, Roman Caesarea, 4245. 34. Maoz, Art and Architecture of the Synagogues of the Golan, 10912; idem, Jewish Art in the Golan; Hachlili, Late Antique Jewish Art from the Golan, 183212.
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Outside the main urban centers of Byzantine Palestine, one is struck by the distinct regional dierences throughout the country. The structures that dominate the Galilee feature monumental facades facing Jerusalem, relief carvings, agstone pavements, two or three rows of columns, few inscriptions or Jewish motifs, and occasionally a permanent bima or two. The Golan synagogues are built of basalt, internally oriented to the south or west, characterized by a richly decorated single entrance (Dikke excepted), a limited repertoire of motifs, and a score of inscriptions, mostly in Aramaic and Hebrew.35 The synagogues further south, in the Jordan Valley, Hebron hills, and Shephelah, generally follow a Byzantine basilical plan but likewise exhibit a good deal of variation.36 Some buildings had an apse, niche, or bima, or a combination thereof. The use of gural representation, as well as of Greek, Aramaic, and Hebrew, also varied considerably (g. 26). By and large, it can be said that gural representation and the use of Greek were ubiquitous in hellenized urban settings and much less common in more remote rural regions. Thus, the less accessible Upper Galilee was considerably more conservative in such matters than the Lower Galilee, with its cities and major roads,37 and southern Judaea, including En Gedi, was less receptive to gural representation than were communities in the coastal region. Diversity among synagogues, however, was not only external, but also penetrated beyond the facades, plans, art, and language of the building; synagogue liturgy likewise varied from place to place at this time. As noted in Dierences in Customs, a composition listing the variant religious practices of Palestine and Babylonia in Late Antiquity: As for the residents of Eretz Israel, the section of the Torah read in one area is not read in another. 38 And, in fact, we know of a number of dierent customs for reading the Torah and haftarah at that time. The prayer service also seems to have varied in dierent locales, as was surely the case with regard to the piyyut or the types of targumim and sermons being oered.39 Having established the rich variety among synagogues in Byzantine Palestine, two caveats are in order. The rst is that this variety existed in an institution that was common to Jews everywhere. There may have been dierent architectural models, but the building served as the public space of each and every Jewish community. The art in these edices may have been selected according to local criteria, but the use of depictions with Jewish content was universal. From one synagogue to the next, the Torah may have been read at a dierent pace or a dierent haftarah may have been recited, but the centrality of these forms of worship was shared by all.
35. Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen, passim; Hachlili, Late Antique Jewish Art from the Golan, 183212. 36. Kloner, Ancient Synagogues: An Archeological Survey, 1118; Foerster, Ancient Synagogues, 3842. 37. E. M. Meyers, Galilean Regionalism, 93101. 38. No. 48 (pp.188 and 169). 39. Shinan, Sermons, Targums and Reading from Scriptures, 97.; see below, Chap. 16.
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The second caveat relates to the diversity discussed above. Then, as in earlier times, decentralization and local autonomy characterized Jewish life. To the best of our knowledge, no centralized institution or political-religious oce determined how communities would function on a local level; the result is a rich tapestry of behavioral and communal preferences. We shall return to these two points below.
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nomenon has been completely reevaluated, rendering a far more nuanced and complex picture than heretofore imagined.44 Today, we can safely conclude that Jews in the biblical and early Second Temple periods did, in fact, make use of a variety of gural representations. Examples from the biblical period include the cherubs over the holy ark, the cherubs and animal gures used by Solomon in his Temple and palace decorations, and the twelve oxen supporting the large basin in the Temple courtyard.45 In additon, the bronze serpent attributed to Moses, the golden calves in the northern sanctuaries of Dan and Beth-el, and innumerable gurines and seal engravings (e.g., of lions, horses, gazelles, cocks, snakes, and monkeys) found at Israelite sites and dating primarily to the eighth and seventh centuries b.c.e. all point to a generally permissive attitude toward this art form in the First Temple era.46 Even as late as the Persian and early Hellenistic eras, the Yehud coins minted in Jerusalem feature a wide variety of gural representations, including owls, eagles, a winged leaping animal, a Persian king, a divine gure sitting on a winged wheel, a warrior, a governor, a high priest, and depictions of Ptolemy, Berenice, and Athena (g. 27).47 At the turn of the second century b.c.e., the Tobiad Hyrcanus used a variety of carved animal reliefs when building his estate east of the Jordan River.48
44. Avigad, Beth Shearim, III, 27587. See also Schubert, Jewish Pictorial Traditions, 14759. 45. Exod. 25:20; 36:35; I Kgs. 7:23. 46. Num. 21:9; II Kgs. 18:4; I Kgs. 12:2633; A. Mazar, Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 5017; Isserlin, Israelite Art, 4450. 47. Meshorer, Ancient Jewish Coinage, I, 1334; idem, Treasury, 1121; Barag, Coin of Bagoas, 9799; idem, Silver Coin, 414. It is interesting to note that in the Persian period, although Jewish society was largely isolationistat least as far as our literary sources indicateJudaean coins were heavily inuenced by foreign motifs, including what appear as rather daring gural representations. In contrast, the Hasmonean era witnessed a great deal of Hellenistic inuence, especially within the ruling elite, although its coins and other forms of artistic representation were strictly aniconic. 48. NEAEHL, II, 64748.
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28. Coin of John Hyrcanus. Obverse: palaeo-Hebrew inscription. Reverse: double cornucopias with a pomegranate.
However, beginning in the later Hellenistic (i.e., Hasmonean) period, the pendulum swung sharply in the opposite direction. Strict avoidance of animal and human depictions became the norm in Jewish society for some three hundred years or so, commencing with the rise of the Hasmoneans and lasting until the aftermath of the Bar-Kokhba revolt (ca. 150 b.c.e.150 c.e.).49 The reasons for this radical about-face with respect to gural representation are not entirely clear (g. 28), and a variety of suggestions has been put forth: (1) a traumatic reaction to the 167 b.c.e. desecration of the Temple by Antiochus IV, which included coercive pagan worship; (2) a more stringent position in this regard reecting the attitude of the Sadducees, who were generally in control of aairs in Jewish Palestine in the late Second Temple period; (3) a strict policy advocated by the Pharisees; (4) the direct result of Hasmonean policy, which aimed, in part, at cultivating unique Jewish modes of expression, including art; and (5) a Jewish reaction to hellenization and the threat of foreign inuences.50 Thus, the reintroduction of gural representation beginning in the late second and
49. This gural avoidance is evident rst and foremost in the coins of the era; see Meshorer, Ancient Jewish Coinage, I, 3598; II, 5165; idem, Treasury, 2357. See also Avigad, Discovering Jerusalem, 14450; Kon, Jewish Art, 6064; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 65119. 50. For these various opinions, see Avigad, Beth Shearim, III, 27778; M. Smith, Goodenoughs Jewish Symbols, 60; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 67; Simon, Verus Israel, 23. See also Avi-Yonah, Jewish Art and Architecture, 25063; idem, Oriental Art in Roman Palestine, 1327; B. Cohen, Art in Jewish Law, 167. Nevertheless, here, as elsewhere, not all the evidence corresponds with this avoidance, especially in the Herodian era. A few depictions of sh and birds appear among the archaeological remains from the Jewish Quarter, while Herod (on one occasion) and some of his descendants (Philip and Agrippa I) used gures on some of their coins, as did Antipas in his palace in Tiberias. See Avigad, Discovering Jerusalem, 150, 169; Meshorer, Ancient Jewish Coinage, II, 29, 4446, 6061; Josephus, Life 6566. According to Josephus (War 5, 181), the fountains in Herods Jerusalem palace were in the shape of bronze animals. Finally, an enigmatic statement in the Tosefta (Avodah Zarah 5, 2 [p. 468]) claims that stamps or seals bearing imagesnot humanwere known in Jerusalem.
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third centuries c.e., and rst evidenced on Galilean urban coins and at Bet Shearim, is far from exceptional in the wider perspective of Jewish history. It reects yet another shift of the pendulum with regard to Jewish attitudes toward gural representation owing to internal needs and in response to the wider cultural, social, and political contexts in which the Jews found themselves (g. 29). Here, too, a number of suggestions (not necessarily mutually exclusive) have been oered to explain the reintroduction of gural art: (1) the ever increasing hellenization of the Jewish population; (2) the Jews increasing minority status, which made the need for social, economic, and cultural accommodation to the outside world ever more pressing; (3) the decline of paganism and the acceptance of the view that images were not a threat; (4) the disappearance of a cluster of religious phenomena (e.g., the apocalyptic-messianic mode, the striving for political independence, widespread purity concerns) that characterized the Jewish society of the late Second Temple period (from the Hasmonean era onward); and (5) the liberal stance in this regard adopted by Patriarchal circles.51 Whatever the reason(s), the exigencies of the time were ultimately the determining factors in this last-noted shift. While we do not know why and how this happened within Jewish society generally, as reected in the many opinions cited above, we do have some evidence of this shift within rabbinic, and more specically Patriarchal, circles. Flexibility among the sages often derived from a creative use of hermeneutics, which itself was driven by historical necessity and, at times, ideological convictions.52 This was certainly the case with the Patriarchate, the leading communal oce among Jews from the second to fth centuries c.e., and was dramatically expressed in a story regarding Rabban Gamaliel II (ourished ca. 90120 c.e.):
Proklos, the son of Philosophos, asked [a question of ] Rabban Gamaliel while the latter was bathing in the bath of Aphrodite in Acre, saying to him: It is written in your Torah, and there shall not cleave to you any of the devoted [i.e., forbidden] thing [Deut. 13:18]. Why do you thus bathe in the bath of Aphrodite? He answered: One may not give an answer
51. See Simon, Verus Israel, 2327; Urbach, Rabbinical Laws of Idolatry, 154., 236.; J. Baumgarten, Art in the Synagogue, 198, 201, 206, and my forthcoming book, Visual Judaism. Urbach has built his oft-quoted theory on this very assumption, namely, that the fear of idolatry lurked behind the earlier aniconic posture, and that paganisms decline in the second and third centuries led to a more liberal rabbinic legislation vis--vis gural art. Such an assumption, however, is problematic. There is no evidence that at any time in the Second Temple period idolatry was perceived as a threat to the Jews, except, of course, during the three years of Antiochus persecutions (167164 b.c.e.). This view is attested in both Second Temple non-rabbinic and later rabbinic sources; see Judith 8:18; Josephus, War 2, 19598; Song of Songs Rabbah 7, 13 (ed. Dunesky, p. 160; Vilna edition, 7, 8); B Yoma 69b (= B Sanhedrin 64a). Thus, Jewish avoidance of gural art ought to be attributed to other causes, no less than their subsequent re-adoption of this form of representation. See also Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 28587, as well as my Visual Judaism. 52. See below, Chap. 13.
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in the bath. And when he came out he said: (1) I did not come into her [Aphrodites] area [lit., boundary], she came into mine. People do not say, Let us make a bath for Aphrodite, but rather, Let us make a [statue of ] Aphrodite as an adornment for the bath; (2) moreover, even if they would oer you much money, you would not enter your place of worship [lit., idolatry] naked and suering pollution and urinate in front of her [i.e., Aphrodite]. But she stands at the edge of the gutter, and everyone urinates in front of her; (3) the verse only refers to their gods; that which they treat as a god is forbidden and that which they do not treat as a god is permitted. 53
The response attributed to Rabban Gamaliel is as fascinating as it is far reaching. He is quoted as oering three reasons for frequenting a pagan-ornamented bathhouse. The rst deals with the denition of the buildings function: Was it built to serve as a pagan sanctuary or a bath? Was the statue of Aphrodite inherent to the buildings function, or was it merely an ornamentation? Rabban Gamaliels answer was that the statue was meant to be purely decorative, as the building itself was intended to fulll a secular purpose. Secondly, the nature of a facility should also be judged by what people actually do there. When one walks around naked and urinates with no regard to the presence of a statue of a deity, the statue is clearly of no real consequence for those in attendance. Thus, the bathhouse was not to be regarded as something sacred or specically pagan. The third claim, however, is the most far reaching. One should view a place or an object as idolatrous only if it is so regarded by the pagans themselves; if it is not considered idolatrous, but only decorative, it ought to allow for a more permissive attitude and behavior. This last response is the most revolutionary precisely because it is cast as a general principle. Nothing, not even a statue, is inherently forbidden; everything depends on its function and on the intention of those who placed it there.54 The transition from a rigid aniconic posture in the late Second Temple period to a less restrictive stance in Late Antiquity was not always easy or smooth. Dierences of opinion might often be sharp and even bitter, and this was true within rabbinic circles as well.55 However, it is only for Byzantine Palestine that our diverse sources furnish us with
53. M Avodah Zarah 3, 4. For a dierent dating of this story, to the time of Rabban Gamaliel III (early third century), see Wasserstein, Rabban Gamliel and Proclus, 25767. See also the story recorded in T Moed Qatan 2, 15 (p. 372), recounting how Rabban Gamaliel sat on a bench of gentiles (perhaps ordinarily used for commercial purposes) on Shabbat, much to the chagrin of his Jewish hosts. 54. The same Rabban Gamaliel had various representations of the moon in his upper chamber, which he would use when cross-examining witnesses testifying to a new moon (M Rosh Hashanah 2, 8). An analogous situation cropped up in the mid third century regarding the use of the Bostra nymphaeum by Jews for drinking water. R. Yoanan overruled his friend and colleague Resh Laqish and permitted such usage, despite the presence of statues and the fact that the site was occasionally used for pagan rituals. See Y Sheviit 8, 11, 38bc; B Avodah Zarah 58b59a; and Blidstein, R. Yohanan, Idolatry and Public Privilege, 15461. 55. See J. Baumgarten, Art in the Synagogue, 198204; L. Levine, Judaism and Hellenism, 10610; and esp. below, Chap. 13.
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a detailed and nuanced picture of the varied attitudes toward gural art within Jewish society. The use of animal and human gures had become, on the one hand, quite acceptable in many communities, although some were clearly more daring than others. On the other hand, our data also point to individual communities or entire regions that tended to be more conservative, studiously avoiding such representations. Predictably, many of the latter communities tended to be in rural districts or relatively isolated regions, such as the Upper Galilee and southern Judaea, although conservative communities may have also been found in or near large urban centers, as, for example, the Reov synagogue in the Bet Shean area.
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adopted a pattern of the Temple facade, which was also being used in the sixth-century Madeba church.59 This common reservoir of motifs came from a limited menu of Jewish symbols and depictions, together with a much wider range of motifs hailing from the Byzantine world. This was the setting for a series of creative syntheses in synagogue art as Jewish communities throughout the country forged their own combinations from the options available. An important facet of synagogue art in the Byzantine period is the greatly increased use of Jewish motifs and symbols as compared with earlier times. Interestingly, biblical scenes or gures were only sparingly used.60 The Aqedah (Binding of Isaac) scene at Bet Alpha is the most elaborate example of biblical art (g. 30); others include the gures of Daniel (Naaran, Susiya), David (Gaza and possibly Merot; g. 31), and Aaron, as well as fragmentary representations of the Aqedah and possibly the visit of the three angels to Abraham and Sarah (Sepphoris), and what is arguably a depiction of the symbols for the twelve tribes (Yaa). Regarding Jewish symbols, the menorah is far and away the most
59. Foerster, Allegorical and Symbolic Motifs, 54647. 60. No less remarkable is the fact that there are no traces of biblical gures or scenes in Jewish funerary art in either Roman-Byzantine Palestine or the Diaspora.
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common one, often appearing with a shofar, lulav, and ethrog. A frequent pattern in synagogue mosaics features a Torah shrine anked by pairs of menorot, shofarot, lulavim, ethrogim, and incense shovels.61 These clusters of Jewish symbols frequently accompanied the zodiac signs, although they often appeared independently as well (e.g., Bet Shean A; g. 32). The meaning and signicance of the above-mentioned cluster of symbols have long been debated (g. 33). One popular theory maintains that they were primarily intended to recall the Jerusalem Temple (or possibly the Wilderness Tabernacle),62 with the facade representing that of the Temple and the menorah, shofar, lulav, ethrog, and incense shovel symbolizing accoutrements once used in that setting. If this interpretation is granted,
61. Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 234300; B. Narkiss, Representational Art, 366. 62. B. Narkiss, Scheme of the Sanctuary, 13; Khnel, Jewish Symbolism, 14749; Grossberg, Reactions, 6465. See also Branham, Vicarious Sacrality, 31945; Z. Safrai, From Synagogue to Little Temple, 2328. For other possible explanations of the incense shovel, see M. Narkiss, Origins of the Spice Box, 32.
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32. Panel from the Bet Shean A synagogue exhibiting a series of Jewish symbols.
then the clear implication is that remembering the Temple was of paramount importance in many Byzantine Jewish communities. The appearance of this motif in the synagogue could then be viewed as triggering a memory of that institution and hopes for its restoration, or perhaps as reecting a desire that the synagogue be considered a continuation of the Temple in terms of sanctity and religious signicance. A second approach regards these religious symbols within the context of the synagogue itself.63 The facade is thus interpreted as a representation of the Torah shrine, while the other symbols represent the various objects found in the synagogue setting or used in the synagogue service. By Late Antiquity, the shofar and lulav had become integral parts of synagogue worship. Each of the above interpretations, however, has its weaknesses. To interpret the facade as a depiction of the Temples exterior is problematic. It rarely resembles either what we know of the Temple facade (via Josephus or Mishnah Middot) or, in fact, of the Temple facade depicted in second- and third-century Jewish art (e.g., on the Bar-Kokhba coins or the Dura frescoes). Given this fact, it has been further suggested that the synagogue depictions refer to an inner portal of the Temple, but this, too, is unconvincing. The incense shovel and menorah (though not two menorot) are certainly appropriate for the
63. Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, 3339; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 11136; XII, 8386; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 27280. Amit, Reactions and Comments, 6566.
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Temple context, but one wonders why the shofar, lulav, and ethrog were so emphasized, since they appear to have been quite peripheral to ocial Temple worship. Moreover, with the Temple in mind, one could readily suggest other items that would have been even more closely identied with its ritual: the altars, showbread table, priestly garments, etc. On the other hand, the symbols depicted seem to t a synagogue context rather nicely, the one problematic element being the incense shovel. It patently does not apply to the synagogue or its liturgy, at least on the basis of what we know to date.64 A third approach, intriguing though not without its own problems, interprets a number of these symbols as referring to the major holiday season during the month of Tishri, when three major Jewish festivals occur in rapid succession: Rosh Hashanah (the New Year), Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement), and Sukkot.65 Thus, some of the above-noted symbols can easily be associated with one of these holidays: shofarRosh Hashanah; in64. It seems, however, that at least some Jews used incense in tombs, as reported by the sixth-century Christian pilgrim Antoninus Martyr regarding the Cave of Machpelah in Hebron; see Tobler and Molinier, Itinera Hierosolymitana, 374; Antoninus Martyr, in PPTS (p. 24). 65. First suggested by Braslawski (Symbols, 11518) and later espoused by Wirgin (Menorah as a Symbol of Judaism, 14142); Eitan (Menora as a Symbol, 49); and Fine (This Holy Place, 121).
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cense shovelYom Kippur;66 lulav and ethrogSukkot. The last-mentioned holiday was considered the most popular and important of the pilgrimage festivals in the late Second Temple period, while Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur became known in rabbinic tradition as the Days of Awe (or, in modern parlance, the High Holidays). The latter two holy days were greatly developed in scope and content by the rabbis following the destruction of the Second Temple and came to represent a wide range of ideological themes and religious values. Indeed, it may not be coincidental that the High Holidays were more exclusively synagogue-centered than other festivals. In this vein, it is interesting that John Chrysostom chose to inveigh against these holidays and symbols in one of his homilies against the Jews:
What is this sickness? The festivals of the wretched and miserable Jews which follow one after another in successionTrumpets, Booths, the Fastsare about to take place. And many who belong to us and say that they believe in our teaching, attend their festivals, and even share in their celebrations and join their fasts. It is this evil practice I now wish to drive from the church.67
Elsewhere, Chrysostom rails at those Christians who are drawn to the sound of the shofar (Rosh Hashanah), dancing (!) and fasting (Yom Kippur), and building booths (Sukkot).68 Thus, it is not inconceivable that synagogues featured these particular symbols, which were associated with the holidays of the month of Tishri and recognized for their centrality by non-Jews as well. It is these very symbols that are often depicted on fragments of gold glass found in the Jewish catacombs of Rome.69 Nevertheless, it must be admitted that the weakness of this theory lies in the fact that it relates to only three of the symbols appearing in these panels, and the least prominent ones at that. The predominant menorah and Torah shrine are not addressed (g. 34). Still another interpretation of this cluster of Jewish symbols is more inclusive in nature. Rather than viewing all of these symbols as a reection of one particular institution (the Temple or the synagogue) or time framework (Tishri), we may indeed be dealing with several simultaneous allusions. Thus, these symbols may actually point to both the Temple and synagogue at one and the same time by amalgamating their representative symbols. Alternatively, one might suggest that each community chose the symbol most meaningful to it, either the Temple or the Torah shrine. The common denominator, i.e., the facade or holy objects, could be interpreted in accordance with each communitys preference.
66. On the importance of the incense shovel for the Yom Kippur ceremony, see Lauterbach, Rabbinic Essays, 5183. 67. Adv. Iud. 1, 1, 844 (also in Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 86). 68. See Adv. Iud. 1, 5, 851; 1, 2, 846; 7, 1, 915; and Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 75. 69. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 10819; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 21824; Noy, JIWE, II, nos. 58897; Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 8185.
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34. Torah shrine anked by menorot and other symbols from the Bet Alpha synagogue.
Finally, a variation of the last-mentioned inclusive approach might view these symbols as representing two basic concepts in Judaism, the Temple and the Torah. Certain symbols are clearly associated with the Temple setting; others would seem to indicate the sanctity of the Torah shrine. Since these two dimensions were often associated with each other in Jewish tradition, starting with placing the two tablets of stone bearing the Ten Commandments together with Moses Torah (Deut. 31:9, 26) in the Wilderness Tabernacle and later in the First Temple, this combination may have found expression here as well. Whatever their specic signicance and meaning, the widespread use of these motifs in a synagogue context certainly gave vivid expression to the institutions religious dimension as well as to the shared symbolic language of Jewish communities everywhere.
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late Roman Palestine was now more fully realized. The Jerusalem orientation of synagogue buildings was further emphasized by the almost universal practice of placing a platform, niche, or apse for the Torah shrine against the Jerusalem-oriented wall.70 In the Galilean-type synagogue, such a podium was located between the entrance portals facing Jerusalem, either on one or both sides of the main entrance (e.g., Gush alav, Nevoraya, and Merot). In other types of buildings, the platform was situated in the center of the wall facing Jerusalem (as at Reov and Khirbet Shema [g. 35]), and in Susiya there seem to have been two such podiums. The emphasis on a Jerusalem orientation was even greater in synagogues adopting a Christian basilical plan that incorporated a niche or apse along the wall facing Jerusalem, with the entrance, atrium, and narthex on the opposite side. Architecturally, these plans guided the synagogue participant to face in a specic direction, and if the prayer leader, Torah reading, or preaching were likewise positioned in or near the apse (or niche), then this focus would have become even more pronounced.71 The appearance of a bima or apse as a xture in most synagogues was not simply an architectural addition. It signied that the Torah shrine was now accorded a permanent and central status within the hall. It will be remembered that Second Temple synagogues had no such arrangement; the Torah scroll(s) was kept elsewhere and introduced into the assembly hall at an appointed time. This feature began to change in the latter part of the Roman period, and by Late Antiquity the presence of a Torah shrine had become the norm as well as an important component in determining the religious ambience of the synagogues main hall; all those present faced the Torah ark and the Jerusalem-oriented wall. This is in contradistinction to the earlier custom, whereby all faced the center of the hall or the elders faced the congregation.72
70. See Fine, This Holy Place, 10511. For further discussion of synagogue orientation, see below, Chap. 9. 71. Hachlili, Niche and Ark, 353. 72. See above, Chap. 3 as well as T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360); Dierences in Customs, no. 36 (p. 156).
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36. Greek (upper) and Aramaic (lower) inscriptions from the ammat Tiberias synagogue.
The artistic dimension, with its rich repertoire of Jewish symbols and biblical representations, is another indication of the increased religious prole of the Late Antique synagogue. In addition, literary sources 73 and a considerable number of inscriptions from this period refer to the synagogue as a holy place ( or hagios topos) and to the community as a holy congregation ( ) or a holy avurah (or association .) References to a holy place appear in synagogues throughout the country, in ammat Tiberias (twice; g. 36), Naaran (four times), Kefar ananiah, Ashkelon, and Gaza, and to the most holy [place] in Gaza and Gerasa.74 Inscriptions from Bet Shean, Jericho, and Susiya mention a holy congregation or community.75 The term the language of the holy house ( ) occurs frequently in Targum PseudoJonathan and may refer to the language used in the synagogue setting,76 while in the same targum of Lev. 26:1, it is the synagogue that almost assuredly is referred to as a sanctuary.77 Thus, we are on safe ground in assuming that in the course of the Byzantine period, the synagogue came to be widely viewed as a holy place,78 a status already articulated in fourth-century Byzantine Imperial legislation. Valentinian I (ca. 370 c.e.) refers to the synagogue as a religionum loca when prohibiting soldiers from seizing quarters there.79
73. For example, Ecclesiastes Rabbah 8, 10. See also Y Bikkurim 3, 3, 65d, where a Caesarean synagogue is likened to Gods Temple. 74. Holy place: Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 16, 26, 60, 64, 65; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, nos. 3, 17, 23. The most holy place: ibid., nos. 10, 21. 75. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 46, 69, 84. 76. Shinan, Aramaic Targum as a Mirror, 24849. 77. See comments in Blidstein, Prostration and Mosaics, 3739; and below, Chap. 13. On the issue of synagogue sanctity, see Schubert, Jewish Pictorial Traditions, 16170; and esp., for a detailed treatment, Fine, This Holy Place. 78. In the early third century, the term holy also appears on coins from Sepphoris with regard to the city and its council (Meshorer, Sepphoris and Rome, 16869). 79. Cod. Theod. 7, 8, 2 (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 16163).
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Such a status is likewise assumed in other edicts issued over the next half-century that aimed at protecting synagogues from violence.80 The tendency to associate synagogue and Temple, rst noted in Palestine in the postTemple era, gained momentum in the Byzantine period. The appearance of plaques containing lists of the twenty-four priestly coursesin Caesarea, Ashkelon, Reov, perhaps Kissum (near Gaza), Nazareth, and Yemenmay serve as evidence of the associations being forged at this time between the synagogue and the memory of the Temple.81 In contemporary piyyutim, the subject of the twenty-four priestly courses became a frequent motif.82 One Byzantine paytan, Hadutha (or Hadutaha), wrote piyyutim for each of the twenty-four priestly courses, and other synagogue poets were themselves priests and seem to have been inclined to focus on Temple-related matters as well.83 We noted in the previous chapter that during the third and fourth centuries Templerelated matters were being introduced into various parts of the synagogue liturgy, for example, the Mussaf Amidah and the maftir reading for holidays, both of which focus on the Temple sacrices.84 It was also about this time that the Avodah service recalling the Temple ritual on Yom Kippur was added to that days synagogue liturgy, as was the recitation of a psalm for each day of the week, a custom rst documented for priests in the Temple.85 In truth, this latter practice is rst explicitly mentioned as an element of synagogue worship only in a source from the seventh or eighth century, but it almost surely originated before then.86 The addition of the psalm not only served to expand the syna80. See above, note 3. 81. Caesarea: Avi-Yonah, Caesarea Inscription, 4657. Ashkelon: Sukenik, Three Ancient Jewish Inscriptions, 1617. Reov: Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 186. Kissum: Z. Ilan, Broken Slab, 22526; Nazareth: H. Eshel, Fragmentary Hebrew Inscription? 15961. Yemen: Degan, Inscription of Twenty-Four Priestly Courses, 3023. See also Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 51, 52, 56, 106. However, these plaques may possibly reect the increasing prominence of priests in Jewish society of Late Antiquity; see Irshai, Role of the Priesthood, 7585. 82. S. Klein, Galilee, 17792; and the numerous articles on the subject by Fleischer, e.g., Regarding the [Priestly] Courses, 14261; Piyyutim of Yannai, 17684; see also idem, Additional Data, 4760. 83. Zulay, On the History of the Piyyut, 11120; Fleischer, Hadutha, 7196. Some paytanim were priests, e.g., R. Pinas biribi Hakohen (Fleischer, Early Paytanim of Tiberias, 370); R. Simeon bar Megas (Yahalom, Liturgical Poems of imon bar Megas, 11). In addition, piyyutim written for the Ninth of Av often focus on the Temple priests, their roles, and the Temple cult; see Fleischer, Qaliric Compositions, 140. On the connection between hekhalot mysticism and Temple traditions, see Elior, From Earthly Temple, 21767. 84. See above, Chap. 6. 85. On the Avodah service, see B Yoma 36b and 56b. Although these traditions are from fourthcentury Babylonia, there is little doubt that such a practice was current in Palestine as well, as attested by the scores of piyyutim that highlight the Avodah service; see Elbogen, Studien, 49.; Goldschmidt, Mahzor, I, xviiixxv; L. A. Homan, Canonization, 107. On the psalms associated with specic days of the week, see Avot de R. Nathan, A, 1 (p. 3a). 86. Tractate Soferim 18, 2 (pp. 31013).
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gogue liturgy by adopting older patterns of Temple worship but, in turn, reinforced the link between these two institutions. Moreover, we recall the claim ascribed to R. Joshua b. Levi (alternatively: the sages) that the Amidah prayer was introduced as a substitute for sacrices ( 78.) Temple terminology seems to have permeated other aspects of synagogue life as well. In a revealing account of Joseph the Comes collecting taxes for the Patriarch in Cilicia, Epiphanius refers to these monies as tithes and rstfruits. If indeed accurateand it would be dicult to imagine a reason for inventing such termsthen Temple-related expressions for obligatory donations were being invoked by the fourth-century Patriarchate.88 Two very dierent sources from Late Antiquity make this connection between the synagogue and Temple eminently clear. The rst is a halakhic work from the end of the Byzantine period, referred to today as the Book of Court Cases ( ) or the Literature of Court Cases (:)
And thus said the sages: One must not enter the Temple Mount with his sta and shoes. And if, owing to our sins, the Temple Mount is no longer available to us, a lesser sanctuary is and we must behave in [it] in a spirit of holiness and fear, as is written: You must fear My sanctuary [Lev. 19:30]. Therefore, our ancestors have determined that in all synagogue courtyards there should be basins of fresh water for sanctifying [i.e., washing] hands and feet. 89
Even more explicit is a fragment of a midrash on Deuteronomy found in the Cairo Genizah:
As long as the Temple existed, the daily oerings and sacrices would atone for the sins of Israel. Nowadays, the synagogues of Israel replace the Temple, and as long as Israel prays in them, they, in eect, replace the daily oerings and sacrices; and when prayers are recited [therein] at the proper times and [the Jews] direct their hearts [to God through their prayers], they gain merit and will see the rebuilding of the Temple and the sacricing of the daily oering and [other] sacrices, as it is written: And I will bring them to My holy mountain, and I will rejoice in My house of prayer; their sacrices and oerings are welcome on My altar, for My house will be called a house of prayer for all peoples [Isa. 56:7].90
In the former source, the synagogue is acknowledged as inferior to the Temple, yet was still assigned a sucient degree of holiness to warrant a vessel being placed there for the washing of hands and feet. Purication, of course, was crucial for Temple visitors, and the purpose of this custom in the synagogue was undoubtedly to introduce a modicum of such purity and sanctity. In the latter source, however, the synagogue is accorded an
87. B Berakhot 26b. Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7b, ascribes this tradition to the sages ( .) Cf. however, the comments of Blidstein, Prayer, 243 n. 26. 88. Panarion 30, 11, 2. 89. Margoliot, Palestinian Halakhah, 13132. 90. Ginzberg, Geniza Studies, I, 15253.
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even higher status than before, as it, along with prayer, replaced the Temple and sacrices. Moreover, it claims that proper observance of prayer will lead to the reestablishment of the Temple, a situation already foreseen by the prophet Isaiah. The addition of an eternal light ( ) to the synagogue at some point during these centuries further strengthened its association with the Temple. Although lighting xtures for the synagogue are noted in tannaitic sources, there is no indication that these were intended for anything more than basic illumination within the building.91 In several late midrashim, however, the presence of an eternal light is explicitly attested. Clearly, the association of synagogue and Temple had become so accepted during this period that, at some point, a biblically ordained appurtenance intended for the latter was introduced into the former. Another tradition explains the commandment to have lights in synagogues in a very simple and straightforward manner: Synagogues and academies are like the Temple. 92 A striking example of the perpetuation of the Temples memory within the synagogue is the mosaic oor in the fth-century synagogue at Sepphoris, which portrays a series of Tabernacle-Temple oerings.93 Each is depicted graphically and is accompanied by the Hebrew term, e.g., the daily sacrice ( ,)the oil ( )and the meal ( )oerings. Various items used in Tabernacle-Temple ceremonies are likewise depicted, such as trumpets ( ,)the showbread table, and the basket of rstfruits. No other synagogue, with the possible exception of Dura Europos, makes as clear a statement regarding Temple worship in a synagogue setting. Some of the reasons for the synagogues evolution into an institution with a pronounced religious character were suggested in the previous chapter. We noted reasons such as the association of the synagogue with the Temple, the beginnings of a permanent presence of the Torah scrolls in the main hall, the increasing importance of public prayer, and the possible inuence of Diaspora models, some of which, as we have seen, had already achieved a holy status. This process continued into the Byzantine era with a heightened impetus, and several additional factors appear to have played a signicant role at the time. The rst was the remarkable development in the concept of holiness throughout many parts of Late Antique society. Holiness as a religious category characterizing places, people, and objects was becoming an ever greater concern in a wide variety of religious circles. For instance, the holy man had become a well-recognized phenomenon in Late Antiquity.94 Browns pathbreaking studies of the Christian holy man or saint have been followed by that of Fowden with regard to pagan holy gures and by Kirsch-
91. M Pesaim 4, 4. See also Y Pesaim 4, 9, 31b; B Pesaim 53b. 92. Midrash Hagadol, Numbers 8:1 (p. 119). 93. Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption, 2025. 94. On the holy person in the Hellenistic and Roman worlds, see G. Anderson, Sage, Saint and Sophist. Regarding holiness in paganism, see Bowersock, Hellenism, 1528.
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ners comparison of pagan, Christian, and Jewish models.95 It would be dicult to isolate the Jews or the synagogue from these developments; some sort of inuenceat the very least, the proverbial Zeitgeistought to be posited. This was certainly a factor in the practice of placing amulets containing personal prayers on synagogue premises.96 However, a second and more immediate impetus was the dramatic development and growing presence of Christianity throughout much of Palestine at this time.
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The second component of this revolution concerned pilgrimage. Scholars have disputed whether this phenomenon was a seminal and dramatic transformation, new and revolutionary in the fourth century, or the continuation of a process that had originated a century or two earlier, only now with heightened intensity and scope owing to Imperial and church support.100 However, while pilgrimage existed in the second and third centuries, all evidence points to the fact that it was of a dierent kind. Early pilgrimage involved limited distances that pilgrims traveled to reach their destinations and was often restricted to a religious elite whose goals seem to have been cognitive and exegeticali.e., they visited biblical sites for the historical memories with which they were associated.101 What distinguished the new wave of Christian pilgrims were not only the dramatically increased numbers, but also the spiritual and devotional experiences evoked. It is this ontological dimension that was most often primary, as pilgrims from the fourth century onward sought traces of God in these holy places. The temporal and spatial dimensions of Christian Palestine were fast becoming inextricably intertwined with the sanctity of Jesus words and deeds.102 A third element in the Byzantine Christian revolutionand one that relates to the above twois the emergence of a vigorous monastic movement in Palestine beginning in the fourth century. Pilgrims provided a constant source of recruits for the burgeoning monasteries of Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and the Judaean Desert, and one of the monks functions was to provide pilgrims with food, water, lodgings, as well as to introduce them to the holy places, which might include prayer and scriptural readings, in addition to explanations of the sites themselves. Indeed, the development of a vigorous monastic community in Palestine seems to have been closely connected with pilgrimage.103
veneration of martyrs and their tombs and relics, and that this can best account for the growing sanctity of places then appearing in the Byzantine Christian world. 100. Some scholars maintain the newness of this phenomenon; see, for example, Holum, Hadrian and St. Helena, 6681; Sivan, Pilgrimage, Monasticism, 5463; Taylor, Christians and the Holy Places, 30618, 32931; Wilken, Land Called Holy, 82100; Markus, How on Earth Could Places Become Holy? 26162. Walkers study (Holy City, Holy Places? 3641, 31115) of the dierences of opinion between Eusebius and Cyril of Jerusalem regarding the sanctity and centrality of Jerusalem and other holy places dramatizes the transformation that was taking place in Christian thought in the fourth century. See MacCormack, Loca Sancta, 1214. Other scholars maintain continuity with the pre-Constantinian era; see Windisch, Die ltesten christlichen Palstinapilger, 14558; Hunt, Holy Land Pilgrimage, 25; Wilkinson, Jewish Holy Places, 4153. Common to these scholars is the assumption that Jewish veneration of tombs and holy places had spawned similar traditions in early Christianity, which then, almost organically, attained a more developed expression in the Byzantine period. See also Lane Fox, Pagans and Christians, 476; MacCormack, Loca Sancta, 20; Chadwick, History and Thought, 38. 101. MacCormack, Loca Sancta, 2021; Limor, Holy Land Travels, 48. 102. Walker, Holy City, Holy Places? 3738; Holum, Hadrian and St. Helena, 69; Wilken, Land Called Holy, 8384; Taylor, Christians and the Holy Places, 310.; Limor, Holy Land Travels, 1112. 103. Sivan, Pilgrimage, Monasticism, 55: neither the scholarly interest displayed by many of the
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Thus, from the fourth century on, the concept of holiness became associated with myriad Christian sites, particularly in Jerusalem and its environs. This association beneted greatly from Imperial initiatives, an emerging Jerusalem-centered ideology (per Cyril of Jerusalem), and increased pilgrimage. Moreover, this newly discovered sanctity was institutionalized in the developing Christian liturgy, which ritualized these associations. This process rst took root in Jerusalem and was often brought into local churches throughout the Empire by pilgrims returning from the Holy Land.104 In light of our discussion regarding the association of synagogue with Temple, it should be noted that sanctity was often ascribed to churches through their identication with the Jerusalem Temple. Eusebius refers to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre as a New Jerusalem and a temple (), and he similarly applied the latter designation to the church built in Tyre (a temple of God).105 It is reported that in the sixth century, upon completion of his magnicent Hagia Sophia edice in Constantinople, Justinian exclaimed: Solomon, I have conquered you! 106 Moreover, much of the symbolism associated with the Temple and Temple Mount in Jewish tradition was now being transferred to Golgotha and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. This New Jerusalem built over against the one so famous of old 107 was where Adam was created and Isaac was bound as a sacrice, where Egeria saw King Solomons ring and the horn from which the kings of Judah were anointed. The dedication of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre coincided (intentionally?) with the biblical date for the completion of the First Temple by Solomon, and the church too was identied as the omphalos, or navel, of the world.108
early visitors nor the piety that imbued all pilgrims is sucient in itself to explain the vast expansion of Christian topography in early Byzantine Palestine. Nor are Imperial-sponsored projects, like those of Constantine, enough to account for the numerous localities shown to pilgrims toward the end of the 4th century. The renewal of biblical traditions and their association with specic contemporary localities appears to have been largely the unique result of the mutual interests and combined eorts of monks and pilgrims in the 4th century. Otherwise it would be dicult to explain the spread of monasticism in the area, the active involvement of monks and priests in hosting and guiding pilgrims, and the response of pilgrims to the wide-scale promotion of the Holy Land. See also Hunt, Holy Land Pilgrimage, 50106; Hirschfeld, Holy Sites, 11230. 104. Hunt, Holy Land Pilgrimage, 10727. See also Baumstark, Abendlndische Palstinapilger, 8083. See, however, the important reservations of Bradshaw (Inuence of Jerusalem), that the city may have been as much an importer of liturgical traditions as an exporter. For this and other aspects of sanctity in Byzantine Christian life (e.g., community, liturgy, time), see Markus, End of Ancient Christianity, passim. 105. Eusebius, Vita Constan. 3, 33, 36, 45; idem, Eccles. Hist. 10, 4, 13, 25, 69. Regarding the use of naos for other churches, see idem, Vita Constan. 3, 45. 106. Referred to in Wilken, Land Called Holy, 93. See also Procopius, Buildings, 1. A Syriac hymn notes that the cathedral of Edessa was compared to the Wilderness Tabernacle built by Bezalel (Mango, Art of the Byzantine Empire, 57). 107. Eusebius, Vita Constan. 3, 33. 108. Wilken, Land Called Holy, 9397; Khnel, Jewish Symbolism, 15051; see also Alexander, Jerusalem as the Omphalos, 10419.
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Given this monumental change in the status of Palestine for Christians, which included the Galilee as well as Judaea, we might well ask what eect this had on the local Jewish community. It is dicult to imagine that the Jews would or could have been impervious to such developments. Here, however, our sources fail us. Very little is recorded in rabbinic literature about Christianity in general, and what there is stems primarily from the second and third centuries. A number of sources have been cited by scholars which seem to indicate an awareness of fourth-century Christian claims and a rabbinic attempt to counter them.109 However, these sources are only vaguely suggestive (perhaps owing in part to medieval censorship), each bearing a greater or lesser degree of probability. On the other hand, a number of Byzantine Aramaic piyyutim contain fairly explicit barbs at a number of Jesus-related traditions.110 We have suggested elsewhere that the increased use of Jewish symbols in the Byzantine period resulted, in large part, from this Christian ascendance, which moved the Jews to reassert and reestablish their self-identity.111 Moreover, it may well be that the synagogue assumed an increased spiritual and religious role for the Jews as a result of Christianitys emphasis on the sanctity of the land in general and of specic sites in particular, not to speak of the many hundreds of churches now being built throughout the country. The fact that churches were also being referred to as holy or compared to a temple () generally, and to the Jerusalem Temple in particular, may have motivated Jews to make similar assertions regarding synagogue sanctity. In this case, the synagogue would have provided a setting for the Jewish community to express whatever disappointment and de109. See J. J. Schwartz, Encaenia, 26581; Yahalom, Angels Do Not Understand Aramaic, 4244; and the rich trove of material collected and analyzed by Visotzky in his Fathers of the World as well as his Anti-Christian Polemic, 83100. See also the material marshaled (at times, somewhat forced) by AviYonah, Jews of Palestine, 16674. One opportunity for at least some Jews to witness rsthand the power and grandeur of Christian Jerusalem was on the Ninth of Av, when they were allowed to visit the city and mourn the destruction of the Temple, a custom reported in Itinerarium Burdigalense (p. 22). 110. Lately, this inuence of Byzantine Christianity on rabbinic Judaism generally has been emphasized by J. Neusner in a series of publications ( Judaism and Its Social Metaphors, 21204; Judaism in the Matrix of Christianity, 67137; City of God in Judaism, 24178). Neusner, however, seems to have posited too sharp a distinction between pre- and post-Constantinian developments. It is hard to see, for example, how one can condently assume that a midrashic pericope (e.g., from Genesis or Leviticus Rabbah) reects a Byzantine setting. Perhaps such traditions originated earlier, as many of the midrashic texts indeed claim. Such a realization is already reected in the study of Christian liturgy, where former assumptions regarding post-Constantine origins were abandoned in favor of the realization that such practices arose, in fact, much earlier (Bradshaw, Ten Principles, 67). Too radical a redactionalist approach (i.e., following solely the assumed time of compilation to date a tradition) has serious drawbacks, as does the assumption that assigned statements are unquestionably accurate. 111. See L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah, 14553. We are speaking of increased usage; all of the themes that became prominent in the Byzantine period (sanctity of the synagogue, representation of Temple-related motifs, use of religious symbolism, etc.) had already surfaced earlier in one form or another. S. Schwartz seems to overemphasize the extent of Christianitys impact on the Byzantine synagogue, not to speak of the community and its religious life; see his Imperialism, 179202.
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spair it felt, on the one hand, and its longings and hopes, on the other. What they were powerless to realize in the political realm, Jews might have hoped to achieve within the connes of their synagogues, albeit in an associative and symbolic vein.112 The piyyut is clearly a primary source for charting such sentiments. In a sense, the emphasis of most synagogue buildings in this period (Galilean-type and Golan buildings excluded) on a modest exterior and relatively richly decorated interior may oer concrete expression of external political realities and internal communal needs. Galilean-type (mostly in the Upper Galilee) and Golan synagogues, with their impressive facades, were generally located in more isolated areas. Synagogue structures found in the area of the Sea of Galilee, Bet Shean, the coastal and Judaean regionsareas with a far greater Christian presencewere clearly fashioned like the Christian basilica. This type of building provided an architectural model for many contemporary synagogues, which, inter alia, t the social, political, and religious contexts now unfolding.113 It would be interesting to understandorigins asidewhat the Jews of Late Antiquity might have meant when they used the terms sacred and holy with regard to their synagogues. Were the buildings holy because God was present, an idea already found in several statements in rabbinic literature from the second and third centuries but appearing with far greater frequency in the fourth, in both Palestine and Babylonia? 114 Alternatively, did holiness derive from the holy congregation, from sacred objects or functions (i.e., the presence of Torah scrolls and the holding of prayers), or perhaps from the synagogues increasing association with the Temple? 115 A denitive answer to this question is elusive, and it may well be that there is, in fact, no single answer. Various communities might have used the same term but with markedly dierent or overlapping connotations. Moreover, it is conceivableand even quite likelythat even dierent members of the same community did not relate to these terms in the same way.
112. The polemical aspect of Jewish art from the period has been highlighted of late, primarily on the basis of the Sepphoris mosaic; see Khnel, Synagogue Floor Mosaic in Sepphoris, 3143; H. Kessler, Sepphoris Mosaic and Christian Art, 6472; Z. Weiss, Sepphoris Synagogue. 113. On the Byzantine synagogues indebtedness to contemporary Christian models, see Tsafrir, Byzantine Setting, 14757. 114. Second and third centuries: Y Berakhot 5, 1, 8d9a; B Berakhot 6a. See also Urbach, Sages, 5563. Fourth century: B Berakhot 6a; Y Berakhot 5, 1, 9a; 9, 1, 13a; B Megillah 29a; PRK 5, 8 (p. 90) and parallels; Deuteronomy Rabbah 7, 2; Midrash on Psalms 84, 4. PRK 28, 8 (pp. 43132) is instructive in this regard: R. Judan [said] in the name of R. Isaac: Whenever the Jews [lit., Israel] close themselves up in synagogues and academies, the Holy One, Blessed be He, also closes Himself up with them. . . . R. aggai [said] in the name of R. Isaac: Whenever the Jews [lit., Israel] gather in synagogues and academies, the Holy One, Blessed be He, gathers his Shekhina (= Divine Presence) there with them. See Ehrlich, Place of the Shekhina, 32029. 115. See Y Berakhot 5, 1, 9a; B Berakhot 6a, where Gods presence is directly linked to the congregations constituting an assembly of the Lord ( .) See also above, Chap. 6. On the dierent conception of sanctity in Judaism and Christianity, see J. Dan, On Sanctity, 1130.
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Nevertheless, given the developments of the Byzantine era, we would suggest that the sociopolitical context at the time was as signicant a factor in the Jewish usage of holy as any internal spiritual or religious aspirations. With the Byzantine synagogue being associated with and related to Jerusalem and its Temple,116 it may well be that the concepts of holy and sacred were now being utilized to enhance and deepen this connection in light of Christian usage. Moreover, the fact that some churches at this time were identied as replicas or substitutes for the Jerusalem Temple is, as noted, of signicance.117 It presented a challenge to the Jews and forced them to assert their claim that the synagogue was the legitimate continuation of Temple practice and presence.118 The midrash fragment quoted above focuses squarely on this issue, claiming that the synagogue and prayer had now replaced the Temple and its sacrices.119 Churches at this time were also being referred to in inscriptions as holy places, and this, too, is probably not unrelated to contemporary synagogue usage.120 Thus, the association of the synagogue with the Temple, Jerusalem, and holiness, a process that commenced well before Constantine (and especially documented in rabbinic sources), gained impetus in the Byzantine era, undoubtedly having been spurred by Christian practice and polemics.121
116. B. Narkiss, Image of Jerusalem in Art, 1120. 117. Cf. above, note 105; as well as Socrates, Eccles. Hist. 1, 17. 118. It is dicult to ascertain whether the presence of water installations in many synagogues (as in churches) stemmed from a desire to imitate the Temple. Such installations were also found in the Hellenistic-Roman world, in temples, private homes, and other buildings. However, it is impossible to know if their use was interpreted in terms of holiness or as temple-related. The above-cited text from Margoliots Palestinian Halakhah indeed points to the fact that this connection was made, at least in this tradition. 119. See above, note 90. An interesting synagogue practice unique to Palestine reects vividly the awe and reverence for the holy ark and perhaps Jerusalem. Among the series of customs that distinguished Palestinian from Babylonian Jewry and date to Late Antiquity is the following: Those [elders] in the east (i.e., Babylonia) face the congregation [when sitting in the synagogue], and their backs are toward the [Torah] ark; those living in Eretz-Israel face the [Torah] ark (Dierences in Customs, no. 36 [ed. Margalioth, p. 156; ed. Lewin, pp. 7576]). Palestinian elders faced the ark and thus also Jerusalem and the site of the Temple; the Babylonians did not. This practice also diers from that recorded in the T Megillah 3:21 (p. 360), where it is stated that the elders (here: Palestinians) sat with their backs toward the holy (ark? Jerusalem? both?) while facing the congregation. Babylonian Jewry thus continued this older Palestinian practice, while in Byzantine Palestine a new custom evolved that reected a more egalitarian stance (both the elders and the congregation sat facing the ark together) as well as greater reverence vis--vis the holiest object in the room. This renewed interest, if not fascination, with Jerusalem and the Temple on the part of Christians and Jews in the fourth century may throw additional light on Julians revolutionary plan to rebuild the Jewish Temple. 120. See, for example, the references to holy place in regard to the church on Mt. Nebo and twenty or so other sites in Byzantine Palestine in Piccirillo, Mt. Nebo, 36, 51. 121. It should be noted that many Christian communities began to view their own local churches as
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Thus, the synagogue of Byzantine Palestine came to ll many more needs of the Jewish community than ever before, particularly in the religious and spiritual realms, and this development cannot be viewed as a solely internal matter, divorced from the Byzantine historical setting. Many features of the synagogue, both physical and liturgical, are to be linked to patterns, models, and stimuli from the surrounding world.122
CONCLUDING REMARKS
In reviewing the Byzantine synagogue, we have noted several major trends. One is the continued development of the institution throughout Palestine, evident in the increasing number of synagogue buildings, with their elaborate iconography and rich epigraphic remains.123 Imperial legislation prohibiting the building and repair of synagogues was clearly being honored in the breach. However, lurking behind the facade of growth and expansion was a disconcerting reality. With the rise of Christianity, forces were being unleashed and restrictions introduced that threatened to limit the construction and functioning of synagogues, and even destroy them.124 The most violent example of this latter threat were the activities of the fth-century monk Barsauma, who, with his band of forty
holy places. Despite the above-noted insistence of church leaders following New Testament guidelines, i.e., that God is omnipresent and that buildings per se have no inherent sanctity, attitudes in many communities were often strikingly dierent. As Crowfoot (Early Churches, 7) has commented, many church buildings in the eastern Mediterranean largely resembled the church of Tyre, which Eusebius describes as a replica of the Jerusalem Temple. According to Markus: new ways of speech were making their appearance in media which reect more directly the instinctive habits of imagination: we have inscriptions that speak of the house of God, the hall of Christ, and the like; and visual imagery represented the saint in his shrine just as age-old representations showed the dead in his tomb. Before long locus sanctus narratives would come to adorn churches (How on Earth Could Places Become Holy? 264). 122. See below, Chap. 18, as well as Stemberger, Jewish-Christian Contacts, 13146. 123. The abundance of archaeological data for the Byzantine synagogue raises the intriguing methodological question whether this institution actually emerged and ourished in this period or was the latest stage of a phenomenon that existed in earlier periods as well (except that we have many fewer material remains for earlier periods). It is clear from our presentation that, given its role as the primary Jewish public institution, we have assumed the synagogues centrality throughout the Hellenistic-Byzantine eras. The fact that we have so much evidence for Late Antiquity may be best explained as a well-documented phenomenon in archaeology, namely, that the latest strata are those largely preserved, much as we argued in the previous chapter with respect to the absence of rst- and second-century synagogues. Here, too, I dier from S. Schwartzs presentation in his Imperialism, as regards both methodology and, of course, conclusions. 124. See Rubin, Christianity in Byzantine Palestine, 1078; Peters, Jerusalem, 15861. Perhaps the destruction layer in the Reov synagogue was a result of this wave of attacks. See NEAEHL, IV, 1272. See also the decrees of 393 and 397 granting protection to synagogues (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, nos. 21, 25). On the destruction of synagogues generally or their conversion into churches, see below, Chaps. 8 and 9.
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or so fanatic monks, reputedly destroyed synagogues and pagan temples throughout the region. Indeed, these two trendsImperial legislation and locally inspired destruction may not be unrelated. Perhaps it was the laxity, ineectiveness, and perceived corruption of the Imperial bureaucracy in enforcing its decrees limiting non-Christian practice that inuenced some elements within the church, from bishops to monks, to seize the initiative.125 These contradictory forces coexisted for generations. It was only the Moslem conquest, with its far-reaching political, social, and economic consequences, that eectively began to constrict local Jewish life, one of the indications of which was the precipitous decline in the number of synagogues throughout the country.
125. See also Fowden, Bishops and Temples, 5378; MacMullen, Christianizing the Roman Empire, 86101; Rubin, Christianity in Byzantine Palestine, 10711.
eight
DIASPORA SYNAGOGUES
he evidence for the Diaspora synagogue in Late Antiquity invites comparison with the proverbial cup of water only partly full. On the one hand, we have material remains of thirteen buildings (excluding Delossee Chap. 4) as well as hundreds of inscriptions relating to the synagogue or its ofcials.1 In addition, literary sources note scores of synagogues throughout the Persian and Roman-Byzantine worlds, although in most cases nothing substantive is conveyed about the institution.2 On the other hand, given the existence of an extensive and far-ung Diaspora, this evidence appears woefully fragmentary. There can be little doubt that what we have is but a small sample of this Diaspora institution in Late Antiquity. Archaeological remains of synagogues derive from all parts of the Empire, from Dura Europos (Syria) in the east to Elche (Spain) in the west. Between these geographical extremes, synagogue remains have been found at Gerasa in Provincia Arabia (Jordan), Apamea in Syria, Sardis and Priene in Asia Minor, Aegina in Greece, Stobi in Macedonia, Saranda in Albania, Plovdiv (ancient Philippopolis) in Bulgaria, Ostia and Bova
1. For recent surveys of Diaspora synagogue remains from Late Antiquity, see Feldman, Diaspora Synagogues, 4866; Rutgers, Diaspora Synagogues, 6795; idem, Hidden Heritage of Diaspora Judaism, 97123; and esp. Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, passim. 2. See the listing of some sixty-six places in Feldman, Diaspora Synagogues, 49. Rutgers suggests at least 150 synagogues but does not enumerate (Diaspora Synagogues, 67).
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Marina in Italy, and ammam Lif (Naro) in North Africa (g. 37).3 Inscriptions from these synagogues alone number over 200. Taken together with inscriptions found elsewhere (e.g., in Asia Minor), and especially those discovered in the catacombs of Rome and Venosa that mention the titles of synagogue ocials,4 the total number of synagogue3. Excavations at Saranda were carried out in September 2003 under the auspices of the Institute of Archaeology of the Albanian Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Archaeology of Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Two mosaic pavements were found, one with a menorah anked by an ethrog and shofar, the other depicting camels, trees, and the facade of a structure (either a Temple or a Torah shrine). The synagogue dates to the fth or sixth century c.e. and was found beneath a church. Excluded from this list are nine sites whose identication as synagogues remains uncertain. These include Athens; Miletus, Pergamum, and Mopsuestia in Asia Minor; Palmyra in Syria; Carthage and Leptis Magna in North Africa; Chersonesus in the Crimea; and Qana in Yemen. On these sites, see Stavroulakis and DeVinney, Jewish Sites, 4647; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 78; von Gerkan, Eine Synagoge in Milet, 17781; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 48889; Avi-Yonah, Mosaics of Mopsuestia, 18690; Foerster, Survey of Ancient Diaspora Synagogues, 165; Duval, Art palochrtien, 41315; Lund, Synagogue at Carthage? 24562 (see also Rives, Religion and Authority in Roman Carthage, 221 23); Foerster, Fifth-Century Synagogue in Leptis Magna, 5358; MacLennan, In Search of the Jewish Diaspora, 4451; Edwards, Jews and Christians at Ancient Chersonesus, 16670 (see also E. Eshel, Hebrew Grato, 28999). Information regarding Qana was communicated by A. V. Sadov. See also the comments in Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 4952, 20916. 4. The number here could uctuate between several score to well over one hundred, depending on whether one interprets certain oces as being connected to a synagogue, for example, those of presbyter and, more notably, archon, in Rome (this title alone is mentioned in almost fty inscriptions). See Frey, CIJ, I, lxviii.; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 167.; Noy, JIWE, I, 32829. Given the fact that the
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related inscriptions from the Diaspora is well over three hundred.5 The buildings themselves have been discovered over the course of the past century. The earliest report, from the end of the nineteenth century, relates to the ammam Lif synagogue. At the beginning of the twentieth century, synagogues were identied (sometimes arguably, at rst) at Priene, Aegina, and Elche. Between 1929 and 1934, four synagogues were discovered, at Gerasa (1929), Stobi (1931), Dura Europos (1932), and Apamea (1934). Three decades later the synagogues at Ostia (1961) and Sardis (1962) were excavated, in the 1980s, those at Bova Marina and Plovdiv came to light, and in 2003 the synagogue at Saranda was uncovered. In contradistinction to the situation in the pre-70 period, for which literary sources (primarily Philo, Josephus, and Acts) are of inestimable value in any discussion of the Diaspora synagogue, the situation in Late Antiquity leaves much to be desired. There are no literary sources that oer any serious discussion or description of these synagogues or on how they functioned. Jewish sources are restricted almost exclusively to rabbinic literature, which addresses the situation in Babylonia only and even then in a limited fashion. Regarding non-Jewish sources, the synagogue is indeed mentioned both in Roman Imperial sources and by church fathers, and many of these references are of immense value. However, the Roman sources are few in number, and the Christian material, with but few exceptions, is polemical in nature, frequently reporting only a synagogues destruction.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES
We begin with a discussion of the buildings that have been recovered to date, moving geographically from east to west.
Dura Europos
Discovered in 1932, in the course of the extensive excavations carried out by Yale University and the Department of Antiquities of Syria, the synagogue at Dura Europos is the most complete and important one yet recovered.6 The rst of the synagogues two
synagogue was the basic communal institution in Rome, it can be assumed that all ocials named were associated with it in one way or another (see below). 5. In addition to the aforementioned collections, mention should be made of other inscriptions listed by Lifshitz (Donateurs et fondateurs), several from Greece (Corinth, Athens), three from Hungary, at least a dozen more from western Europe, and those known to us from literary sources. An example in the last category would be the inscriptions from the synagogue in Edessa; this building was converted by the bishop Rabbula (died 435 or 436) into the church of St. Stephen; see J. B. Segal, Edessa, 182. 6. The bibliography on this synagogue is understandably extensive. The two basic works are Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue; and Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IXXI. See also White, Building Gods House, 9397; idem, Social Origins, 27293; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora,
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stages dates from the late second or early third century; the second stage was built in 244245 and destroyed in 256. The entire complex in both its stages is clearly identiable (g. 38). Toward the middle of the third century, the synagogue community expanded signicantly and additional facilities were required. A second building was therefore acquired and integrated into the original structure, which itself underwent extensive remodeling. Undoubtedly, the full range of synagogue functions was carried out in the new complex, although it is impossible to designate which room was assigned what function. In each stage, the focus of the building was the sanctuary (house of assembly), where an aedicula serving as a Torah shrine was located in its western wall. Benches lined the four walls of the room, and there may have been some sort of bima or table in the center. The pice de rsistance of this building is its astounding display of Jewish art (g. 39). In its later stage, the synagogue walls were covered from oor to ceiling with frescoes
96197, 42432; Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, 84104, 27377. For a listing of the major authors on this subject, see Gutmann, Early Synagogue and Jewish Catacomb Art, 133842.
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39. Western wall of the Dura Europos synagogue with a Torah niche in its center.
depicting scenes from the Bible. Just above the aedicula on the western wall are Templeassociated representations, i.e., a menorah, the Temple facade, and an Aqedah scene (from the time of Chronicles at least, Mt. Moriah of Genesis 22 has been identied with the Temple Mount). Above these depictions is a series of biblical scenes illustrating the bestowal of blessingsJacob to his sons and grandsonsas well as one of a seated royal gure (David? the Messiah?) holding court. David, dressed as Orpheus and enchanting animals with his music, is also depicted. Flanking this upper panel are four large gures, one of whichon the upper righthand sideis clearly identied as Moses. The identication of the others is unclear, and they have been given many dierent interpretations, including that of Goodenough, who views all of them as Moses.7 The remainder of the wall space in the synagogue illustrates an array of what must have been between fty and sixty scenes taken from the biblical narrative. The nding of Moses, the exodus from Egypt, and Ezekiels vision of the dry bones are the most extensive single representations preserved (gs. 4041), but there are also several cycles of se7. The upper right-hand portrait is Moses at the burning bush and is so identied by an inscription. Based on this identication, Goodenough ( Jewish Symbols, IX, 11023) opines that all the other gures are of Moses as well; the upper left-hand one is Moses at Sinai (another opinion: Joshua); the bottom right-hand one, Moses reading the Law, per Deuteronomy (other opinions: Josiah, Ezra, Samuel, Jeremiah); and the bottom left-hand one, Moses before his death; see Midrash on Proverbs 14 [p. 118] (other opinions: Jacob, Joshua, Isaiah). See also Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 22739; Weitzmann and Kessler, Frescoes, 12732, 17073.
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40. Panel on the western wall of the Dura Europos synagogue depicting Moses and the Children of Israel crossing the Sea of Reeds.
quential events narrated in the Bible, as, for example, the loss of the ark at Even ha-Ezer and its sojourn in Philistine territory, a series of vignettes from the life of Elijah, and a number of depictions relating to the Wilderness Tabernacle and Solomons Temple. It has long been debated whether there is an overall pattern to these scenes.8 Are they arbitrary or is there a comprehensive theme that informs the varied depictions? Barring this, is there any logic in the arrangement of the three horizontal registers in the room i.e., does each represent a dierent idea, and, if so, howif at alldo they interrelate? Despite scores of attempts to answer these questions, no consensus has been reached; assuming an overall plan may be positing a far more ambitious agenda than the Duran Jews had ever dreamed of. Alternatively, as Kraeling and Bickerman noted decades ago, what is represented here might well be a kind of Heilsgeschichte that drew exclusively from the biblical narrative. According to this approach, each individual panel or set of panels has its own meaning and signicance and does not presume one overall theme.9 Whatever the case, the implications of the Dura synagogue representations vis--vis Jewish art are enormous. This is the earliest evidence of sophisticated Jewish art, and it appears enigmatically, almost ex nihilo, in such a developed, detailed, and complex fashion. Studies on the paintings themselves abound, and the latter have also sparked renewed
8. L. Levine, Synagogue at Dura-Europos, 17277; Gutmann, Programmatic Painting, 13754; idem, Early Synagogue and Jewish Catacomb Art, 132228; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 18082. 9. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 35658; Bickerman, Symbolism in the Dura Synagogue, 12751. Carrying this idea even further, Wharton suggests that the Dura narratives are a pastiche and should be viewed as postmodernist (deconstructive, circumstantial, local and multicultural). See Wharton, Good and Bad Images, 125; as well as idem, Reguring, 3851. Regarding other aspects of the Dura frescoes, see below, Chap. 17.
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41. Panel on the northern wall of the Dura Europos synagogue depicting Ezekiel and the vision of the dry bones.
interest in ancient Jewish art generally. The Dura synagogue constitutes the most impressive example to date of this art as well as of midrashic (and not necessarily rabbinic) traditions of the Bible that most probably did not originate there. Lying on the fringes of the eastern Empire, the Dura community was too small and peripheral, and its history too short, to have created such a rich iconographic-midrashic tradition. Most likely, these motifs were found in other Diaspora synagogues. If there were any doubts before its discovery as to whether a developed Jewish art existed at this time, then Dura surely has put them to rest. To date, however, nothing even remotely comparable has been recovered elsewhere. Thus, while the euphoria over the rst revelations of Dura and the expectations of nding other such synagogues has waned somewhat in the more than seventy years that have passed since the sites discovery, these nds clearly indicate that a wider Jewish artistic tradition must have existed.10 The uniqueness of the Dura synagogue also lies in the fact that its immediate urban context has also been extensively excavated and explored.11 This important dimension makes eminently clear the degree to which the builders of this synagogue adapted local
10. See Weitzmann and Kessler, Frescoes, 14350. 11. Perkins, Art of Dura, 3369; Gates, Dura-Europos, 16681.
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architectural and artistic models in order to integrate this edice into the urban architectural and artistic landscape of Dura. The Torah shrine, for instance, was a close approximation of the aediculae in local pagan temples, with the distinction, of course, that in the Jewish context, the aedicula was intended to house a scroll (or scrolls) and not an idol. Linguistically as well, the Jews of Dura merged into the cultural milieu of their surroundings. Some of the nineteen Greek and twenty-two Aramaic inscriptions found are dedicatory; others identify gures and scenes depicted in the frescoes. The ten Iranian inscriptions are enigmatic grati, possibly documenting a series of visits by outsiders to the synagogue. No other site known to date is more illustrative of the adaptability of a Diaspora community to its social, religious, and cultural environment, while at the same time preserving its distinctive character, than that of Dura.12
Gerasa
Excavated in 1929, the synagogue in Gerasa, Jordan, is situated on a mound west of the centrally located Temple of Artemis, at the highest point of the city.13 Remains of the synagogues mosaic oor were found about fteen centimeters beneath the oor of the church that replaced it. East of the synagogue building are the remains of an atrium surrounded by a colonnade on its northern, eastern, and southern sides. It has been conjectured, on the basis of dierent-sized tesserae found in the center of the atrium, that a basin for ablutions may have once stood here, although no actual remains were discovered. From this atrium, one approached the synagogue building by ascending a series of steps to the west. The oor of the vestibule was completely covered with a mosaic pavement containing the familiar cluster of Jewish symbols (menorah, shofar, incense shovel, lulav, and ethrog), a Greek inscription surrounded by several animals (probably lions), and a scene from the Noah story. The last includes a depiction of animals exiting the ark; to its left are the heads of two young men, Noahs sons Shem and Yaphet (whose names appear in Greek), as well as a dove carrying an olive branch in its beak. The Greek inscription anking the menorah reads: To the most holy place, Amen, Selah. Peace upon the congregation (g. 42). Three doors led into the buildings interior, which was arranged in a basilical plan. Two rows of columns separated the nave from the side aisles, and at its western end, in the direction of Jerusalem, there appears to have been some sort of niche. The oor of the nave was paved with marble slabs, and the two side aisles were covered with mosaics. Although fragmentary, the mosaic remains indicate a high level of execution. The west12. This issue will be addressed at greater length in my forthcoming Visual Judaism. On the polemical nature of these synagogue frescoes, see Weitzmann and Kessler, Frescoes, 17883 (vs. Christianity); and Elsner, Cultural Resistance, 269304 (vs. paganism). 13. Crowfoot and Hamilton, Discovery of a Synagogue at Jerash, 21119; Kraeling, Gerasa, 23639, 31823; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, I, 25960; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 10; Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 50; Crowfoot, Churches at Jerash, 1620.
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42. Depiction from the Gerasa synagogue of animals marching to Noahs ark. Note also the menorah and the Greek inscription.
ern part of the pavement was removed and destroyed when the building was converted into a church; only geometric designs and a guilloche border have been preserved. A veline Hebrew inscription was found in the northern aisle: Peace on Israel, Amen, Amen, Selah. Pinas son of Baruch, Yose son of Samuel, and Judan son of izqiyah. The synagogue dates from the fourth or fth century and was replaced by a church in 530531 c.e., at the beginning of Justinians reign, as we learn from an inscription found there.
Apamea
The building at Apamea, situated on the cardo maximus in the very heart of the city, approximately one hundred meters south of the main intersection, was discovered during excavations carried out in the mid 1930s (g. 43).14 The local Jewish community was evidently of sucient stature and prominence to have been able to acquire such a central location. The building was constructed in the late fourth century but appears to have existed for only a number of decades before it was destroyed and converted into a church in the early fth century. The main hall of the synagogue measured about 15.50 by 9 meters; it had a square niche in its southern wall for the Torah scrolls as well as a lavish mosaic oor with impressive carpet-like geometric patterns, as at Sardis (g. 44; see below), as well as a menorah and twenty dedicatory inscriptions that often included the names of the donors and their other family members. Unique to these inscriptions was a listing of the number of feet of mosaic oor contributed by each person: Ilasios150 feet, Sapricia150 feet, Euthalis Scholastikos
14. Brenk, Die Umwandlung der Synagoge von Apamea, 125; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 3234, 198204, 402; Sukenik, Mosaic Inscriptions, 54151; Frey, CIJ, II, nos. 803 18; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 3856; and most recently, Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, 5483, 26265. See also Mayence, La quatrime campagne de fouille Apame, 199204. For the nave inscription mentioning women, see Brooten, Women Leaders, 15859.
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43. Plan of the Apamea synagogue with the niche to the south. Remains of several Byzantine churches with apses facing east were discovered in the synagogues ruins.
140 feet, Alexandra100 feet, Ambrosia50 feet, Domitilla (or Domina, Domnina) 100 feet, Eupithis100 feet, Diogenis100 feet, Basilidas100 feet, Thaumasis (along with his wife Hesychios and mother-in-law Eustathia)100 feet, Hierios (and his wife Urania)100 feet, Colonis75 feet, Theodoros (and his wife Hesychios)35 feet. Among those mentioned, either as donors or honorees, were the head (gerousiarch) of
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the Antioch council, several archisynagogoi, a presbyter, a azzan, and a deacon. Of special interest are several inscriptions that note the date of donation (i.e., the year 703 of the Seleucid era, or 391 c.e.), as well as the participation of community leaders in these endeavors:
In the time of the most illustrious archisynagogoi Eusebios, Nemeos, and Phineos, and the gerousiarch Theodoros, and the most illustrious presbyters Isakios, Saulos, and the others, Ilasios, archisynagogos of the Antiochans, made the entrance of mosaic, 150 feet, in the year 703, the seventh day of the month of Audynaios [= January 7, 391]. Blessings upon all! Ilasios [son] of Isakios, archisynagogos of the Antiochans, for the welfare of Photion his wife, and of [their] children, and for the welfare of Eustathia his mother-in-law, and in memory of Isakios, Edesios, and Hesychios [his] ancestors, made the mosaic of the entrance. Peace and mercy upon all your holy congregation! 15
The above inscriptions reect very dierent types of dedications. The rst records the gift of Ilasios, archisynagogue of the Antiochan synagogue in Apamea, who contributed a sizable section of the oor in honor of his colleaguesthree archisynagogues, a gerousiarch, and at least two presbyters. In contrast, the second inscription speaks of this same Iliasos honoring his family. The former inscription is most unusual and is sui generis among the inscriptions from this synagogue. Thirteen other inscriptions from this synagogue note that donations were made by, or in honor of, a family. Nine of the inscriptions were donated by women, and in another three, wives are mentioned as benefactors along with their husbands. All the inscriptions are in Greek, as are most of the donors names; many are transliterated from Hebrew: Nemeos, Phineas, Isakios, Saulos, and Hesychios. Both Iliasos inscriptions were placed in the entranceway or portico of the synagogue. Another inscription found there states that an anonymous donation was made in the time of Nemeos, the azzan and diakonos of the synagogue, and refers to the synagogue building as a naos.16
Sardis
Discovered in a major city of western Asia Minor in 1962, the Sardis synagogue has deservedly attracted a great deal of scholarly attention over the past generation, particularly through the articles of Kraabel and Seager, and more recently Bonz.17 The Sardis structure is by far the most monumental of all ancient synagogues. Its impressiveness
15. Following Sukeniks transcription and translation in Mosaic Inscriptions, 54445, with several emendations of Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, 54, 57. 16. See Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, 59. 17. For Kraabels and Seagers contributions to this subject, see above, Chap. 1, note 13; see also Bonz, Jewish Community of Ancient Sardis, 34359; idem, Diering Approaches to Religious Benefaction, 13954. See also Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 3754; White, Building Gods House, 98101; idem, Social Origins, 31023; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 5863, 21831, 41012.
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stems from its prominent location, large dimensions, and rich remains. Located on the main street, at an important intersection of the city, the synagogue was housed in what formerly had been a wing of the citys palaestra, or gymnasium (g. 45). Outside its southern wall, facing the main street, the building was fronted by a row of shops, some of which were owned by Jews; a side entrance connected these shops directly with the synagogues atrium.18 No other extant ancient synagogue can match that of Sardis in sheer physical size. The building was some 80 meters long; in its last stage it was divided into two parts, an almost 60-meter-long sanctuary and a 20-meter-long atrium. Compare this to the largest Palestinian synagogues known to dateCapernaum (24 meters), Meiron (27 meters), and Gaza (ca. 30 meters). The palaestra itself was completed some time in the second century c.e. and served as
18. Crawford, Byzantine Shops, 1718.
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46. Four building stages of the Sardis building. The nal two stages were occupied by the synagogue.
the citys immense gymnasium and bath complex (g. 46).19 The complexs southeastern wing, like its northern counterpart, was divided into a series of rooms, which appear to have once functioned as apodyteria (dressing rooms) or exercise rooms, each opening onto the palaestra area. When this wing was converted into a civic basilica, its inner partitions were removed and entrances sealed, and a new entrance was made from the street to the east. The building had a forecourt in the east and an exedra with niches for statues of deities or emperors in the west. It seems unlikely that the building was used by the Jewish community at this juncture; rather, it probably served some public civic function for a period of time. In its next stage, dated to the last half of the third century, the building had clearly been taken over by the local Jewish community of Sardis.20 The wall separating the main hall
19. The history presented here of the synagogue building is based on Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 17173. 20. Adopting Seagers dating, Bonz (Jewish Community of Ancient Sardis, 34359; Diering Approaches to Religious Benefaction, 13954) oers an explanation of the local Jewish communitys rise to
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and atrium was removed to create an 80-meter-long hall. At its western end, three-tiered semicircular benches were built and the exedra was transformed into an apse for seating. The synagogue revealed in the excavations and partially reconstructed on site was built in the fourth century. All stratied archaeological evidence points to a mid century date: the atrium was completed around 360380 c.e.; the main hall, with its piers and elaborate mosaic oor, in the second quarter of the fourth century; and the wall inscriptions, along with the plaques and marble revetment on which they appear, from the mid fourth to early fth centuries. Those attending the synagogue would have entered the atrium from either one of the streets to the east or south. The atrium was large and attractive, with porticoes surrounding an open courtyard lavishly decorated with a mosaic pavement of multicolored geometric patterns. A chancel screen or balustrade stood between the columns that supported the roof. An impressive marble basin for washing and perhaps drinking was located in the center of the atrium. A reference to a fountain of the Jews in a municipal inscription may refer to this basin.21 Three portalsa large central door anked by two smaller onesled from the courtyard into the main sanctuary. Immediately inside the sanctuary, two aediculae on masonry platforms anked the main entrance, at least one of whichmost likely the southern onewas of a better quality and probably held the Torah ark and scrolls (g. 47). The function of the second aedicula remains unknown; additional scrolls or possibly a menorah might have been kept there. Alternatively, it may have served as a seat for an elder or some other ocial, although this seems unlikely given the fact that there were benches in the apse along the opposite (western) wall. As was the case in a number of other places in the synagogue, the stones used for these aediculae originally came from pagan buildings in the city. Pillars divided the central nave and two side aisles of the main hall. As there were no traces of a balcony or stone benches, the congregationwhich by some estimates might have numbered up to one thousand peopleprobably sat on mats or wooden benches, and some might have stood. The oor was lavishly decorated with geometric patterns and divided into seven bays, while the lower parts of the walls were decorated with marble wall panels or revetments (skoutlosis) and the upper parts with panels of brightly colored marble inlay. Toward the western end of the hall stood a massive stone table, labeled the eagle table because of the two large Roman eagles engraved in relief on each of its two supporting stones (g. 48). The table was anked by two pairs of freestanding lions sitting
prominence in the course of the third century, which allowed for the construction of the synagogue. For a suggestion that the synagogue building dates only to the fourth century, see Botermann, Die Synagoge von Sardis, 10321. 21. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 169.
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47. Reconstructed aedicula along the eastern wall of the Sardis synagogue, near the entrances.
back to back. Both the eagles and lions also appear in secondary use, the latter perhaps even dating back to the citys Lydian period, i.e., the sixth to fth centuries b.c.e. According to the excavators estimates, the semicircular benches at the western end of the sanctuary could have accommodated about seventy people (gs. 4950), a number similar to that of the leadership in the large Alexandrian synagogue, discussed above (Chap. 4).22 Directly in front of the apse is a nely executed mosaic oor featuring vine tendrils emerging from a vase or basin, similar, perhaps, to the one located in the atrium outside. The names of donors were incorporated into this mosaic. A stone parapet, perhaps a kind of chancel screen, separated the mosaic and the apse from the main hall. The excavations also yielded a rich harvest of epigraphical material; a total of 85 inscriptions (or fragments thereof ) were found, 79 in Greek and six in Hebrew.23 Of the thirty or so donors listed, only two names are Hebrew derivatives. The Sardis donors are identied either by profession, not uncommon in Jewish epigraphy, or by public oce, which was far less common. Among the synagogue members were provincial and city o22. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273). 23. Kroll, Greek Inscriptions, 1127; Cross, Hebrew Inscriptions, 319.
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48. Eagle table from the main hall of the Sardis synagogue.
cials, procurators, city councillors, comes, and members of the decurionate. Altogether, this synagogue boasted well-placed and inuential members of the city, which would indeed account for the buildings central location, size, and impressiveness, as well as the ability of the Jewish community to maintain such an imposing facility for centuries.24 Of particular interest regarding the religious functioning of the synagogue is an inscription found in the very center of the mosaic oor mentioning one Samoe, hiereus [priest] and sophodidaskalos, the latter title referring to a wise teacher or a teacher of wisdom. Given the prominent position of this inscription, it is clear that Samoe at one time occupied a central religious role within the community. It has also been suggested that this Samoe may have preached or taught from the very spot where the inscription was found.25 Finally, synagogue inscriptions tell us something about the nature of the Judaism understood and practiced in this synagogue. One inscription refers to the Torah shrine as a nomophylakion (i.e., that which protects the Law); another bears the cryptic sentence Having found, having broken,26 read! observe! These inscriptions were carefully executed and may once have been prominently displayed in the synagogue hall near the Torah shrines. Eleven inscriptions mention the Greek term pronoia (divine providence), and the
24. For a somewhat dierent reconstruction of the communitys history, see Bonz, Jewish Community of Ancient Sardis, 10622. 25. Hanfmann and Bloom, Samoe, 10*14*. 26. The term may refer to the breaking open of a text (i.e., to decipher its meaning) or to breaking a seal in order to open a scroll; see Kraabel, Diaspora Jews and Judaism, 289.
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49. Drawing of the western section of the Sardis synagogue, with the eagle table, two pairs of lions, and an apse with benches along the western wall.
appropriation of this cosmopolitan Greek philosophical-religious concept apparently reects a signicant degree of acculturation among the Jews.27 In addition, remains of some nineteen menorot were found, some incised in stone, brick, metal, or pottery. The most impressive is an ornate stone menorah that also bears the name of its donor, Socrates.28 It is little wonder that such synagogue nds have thrown into question many of the negative assumptions prevalent in former generations concerning late ancient Diaspora Jewish life. They have demonstrated, beyond all doubt, that at least some communities had achieved a high degree of recognition and status within their individual cities; in the case of Sardis, this privileged position continued for several centuries after the Christianization of the Empire, right up the Persian destruction of the city in 616.29
Priene
The synagogue at Priene, located on the Ionian coast of Asia Minor between Ephesus and Miletus, was identied as such only decades after it was excavated.30 At rst referred to as a house-church, it appears that the building originally functioned in the Hellenistic period as a private residence and was transformed into a synagogue some time in the second or third century.31 The main hall was an irregular rectangle, measuring 10.20 meters (east to west) by 12.5913.70 meters (north to south); two rows of stone slabs served as stylobates and were laid on an east-west axis; a niche 1.35 by 1.37 meters
27. Kraabel, Pronoia at Sardis, 7596; Rajak, Gifts of God at Sardis, 23236; and, more generally, Harrison, Benefaction Ideology, 10916. 28. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 176. 29. Crawford, Multiculturalism at Sardis, 3847. See, however, Goodman (Jews and Judaism in the Mediterranean Diaspora, 20824), who suggests that, at least until the fth century, the synagogue was used by non-Jews who worshipped the God of Israel. 30. Wiegand and Schrader, Priene, 480; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 77; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 48991; White, Building Gods House, 6768; idem, Social Origins, 32532; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 5658. 31. White, Social Origins, 32830.
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was cut into its eastern wall, thus indicating that this was a broadhouse-type synagogue (see Chap. 9) similar to the one at Dura Europos. The hall had benches along its northern wall and a small forecourt. A series of rooms, undoubtedly serving a wide variety of congregational purposes, surrounded the hall. The identication of this building as a synagogue became conclusive with the discovery of a number of smaller items bearing Jewish symbols.32 A relief, which appears to originally have been axed to the wall, was found on the oor in front of the niche; it depicted the usual symbols and featured a menorah anked by peacocks. Nearby, a pillar incised with a menorah was found on the oor. Presumably, the carving was never completed, as only three branches of the menorah are represented. Another relief, showing a menorah with a lulav and shofar on one side and an ethrog on the other, was found in a church next to the theater and may have originated in this synagogue. Lastly, a large basin, almost a meter in diameter, was found in the synagogue building.
32. Wiegand and Schrader, Priene, 480; Foerster, Survey of Ancient Diaspora Synagogues, 165; White, Social Origins, 332.
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Aegina
The synagogue of Aegina, an island in the Aegean Sea near Piraeus, the port of Athens, was located close to the local harbor.33 Traces of ancillary rooms were found at the northern end of the building, which perhaps had a portico at its western end. The main hall measured 13.50 by 7.60 meters, and there was an apse on its eastern end measuring 5.50 meters in diameter. The oor of the nave had a mosaic pavement with geometric designs (g. 51). Dated to the fourth century, the synagogue appears to have been built over an earlier structure of unknown identity but identical in plan. The following two Greek inscriptions were found at the western end of the mosaic oor.
I, Theodoros, the archisynagogos who served for four years, built the synagogue from its foundations. Revenues [contributed] amounted to 85 gold pieces and oerings to God [i.e., from the synagogue treasury] [amounted] to 105 gold pieces. Theodoros the younger being in charge, the mosaic work has been done out of synagogue revenues. Blessings upon all who enter.34
33. Mazur, Studies on Jewry in Greece, 2533; Sukenik, Ancient Synagogues, 4445; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 7576; Foerster, Survey of Ancient Diaspora Synagogues, 16667; White, Social Origins, 35659; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, passim. 34. Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 72223; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 12; Sukenik, Ancient Synagogues, 44; Wischnitzer, Architecture of the European Synagogue, 45; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 7576; White, Social Origins, 35659.
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52. Menorah from the mosaic oor in the Plovdiv (Philippopolis) synagogue.
Plovdiv
Discovered in Bulgaria in 1981, this synagogue was located in the center of ancient Philippopolis (now Plovdiv), a city founded by Philip II of Macedonia.35 It was located on a cardo, not far from the forum and close to other major public buildings (a large bath complex and a basilica). The synagogue hall itself is part of a larger complex which, although poorly preserved, clearly included at some point a number of rooms and courtyards. The hall was oriented southward toward Jerusalem and there were entrances in the north, where an atrium was located. Although it appears to have been almost square, the hall had a basilical plan with two rows of columns. Measuring 13.5 meters (north to south) by 14.2 meters (east to west), its nave was 9 meters wide and the two aisles each measured 2.6 meters wide. The total area of the entire synagogue complex is estimated to have been 600 square meters. Remains of the buildings mosaic oor indicate a tripartite division, with each panel measuring 3.0 by 3.8 meters. Geometric designs predominate alongside an array of ivy leaves. A large, highly ornate seven-branched menorah with a circular base adorned the central panel (g. 52). The mosaic oor contained two inscriptions in Greek; the better-preserved one was found in a side panel: From his [resources], and according to design [or Providence],36 Cosmianus, otherwise known as Joseph, made this decoration. Blessing to all. Dated on palaeographic grounds to the third century, the inscription notes a wealthy benefactors gift to the synagogue. The synagogue had presumably suered, as did much of the city during the Gothic incursions of the mid third century, and the renovation recorded in
35. Danov and Kesjakova, Unique Finding, 21026; and, for somewhat more detail, Danov, Neues aus der Geschichte von Philippopolis, 10723; Koranda, Menorah-Darstellungen, 21839; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, passim. 36. See Danov and Kesjakova, Unique Finding, 212.
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this inscription possibly came in their aftermath. It is unusual to see a Greek (or Latin) name together with a Hebrew (or Semitic) one, although the same phenomenon occurs in nearby Stobi as well. Nevertheless, each of these names is attested elsewhere for Jews.37 An early third-century inscription from Intercisa (Hungary) mentions one Cosmius, a customs ocial who likewise contributed to a synagogue.38 Finally, the formula Blessing to . . . appears, for example, in other Jewish inscriptions from Italy, Syracuse, Aegina, and Bet Shearim.39 The second inscription, which is fragmentary and very poorly preserved (made the arrangement and the decoration), was found at the foot of the mosaic menorah, on either side of its base, and is dated to the fourth century. By the fth century, the synagogue was no longer in use.
Stobi
Located in Macedonia, about 160 kilometers north of Salonika, the ancient town of Stobi was excavated extensively between the years 1924 and 1934.40 Amid a cluster of buildings along one of the main streets between the Roman bridge and a church, a structure was identied as a synagogue on the basis of a monumental Greek inscription found therein.41 However, excavations soon made it clear that the building functioned as a church from some time in the fth or sixth century. The column on which the synagogue inscription appears was clearly in secondary usage. For decades since the excavation of this building in 1931, the only evidence for a synagogue was this very impressive and informative inscription, arguably the most important one found to date in any Diaspora synagogue setting (g. 53):
The year 311 [?]. Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos, also named Achyrios, father [pater] of the synagogue at Stobi, having lived my whole life according to Judaism, have, in fulllment of a vow, [given] the buildings to the holy place, and the triclinium, together with the tetrastoon, with my own means, without in the least touching the sacred [funds]. But the ownership and disposition of all the upper chambers shall be retained by me, Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos, and my heirs for life. Whoever seeks in any way to alter any of these dispositions of mine shall pay the Patriarch 250,000 denarii. For thus have I resolved. But the repair of the roof tiles of the upper chambers shall be carried out by me and my heirs.42
37. On the name Joseph in Jewish inscriptions, see Noy, JIWE, I, nos. 70, 79. 38. See Scheiber, Jewish Inscriptions, 29. 39. Noy, JIWE, 203. 40. Kitzinger, Survey of the Early Christian Town of Stobi, 81161; Marmorstein, Synagogue of Claudius Tiberius Polycharmus, 37384; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 49497; White, Social Origins, 34352; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 6367, 23133, 410. See also Moe, Cross and Menorah, 14857. 41. See, for example, Wischnitzer, Architecture of the European Synagogue, 79. 42. Translation generally follows White, Social Origins, 35256. See also Kitzinger, Survey of the
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
This inscription is of enormous historical value. In the rst place, it mentions the name of the donor and his oce or title. The combination of Latin and Greek names would seem to indicate his position of prominence within the Jewish community and perhaps within the town as well. The title pater appears elsewhere in Jewish inscriptions, but its precise meaning remains elusive. Like the feminine mater, it clearly derives from the larger Greco-Roman world and may have been essentially honoric, although some have suggested that it may have referred to a member of the gerousia.43 Secondly, the inscription tells us something about the synagogue building itself. The main hall is referred to as a holy place, clearly indicating its distinct religious prole. In addition, Polycharmos built a series of other unspecied structures ( . . . ), perhaps referring to one or more buildings adjoining the synagogue. As we will see below, this may apply in particular to the building directly south of it, where there appears to have been a passage between the two (see below). In addition to the general designation,
Early Christian Town of Stobi, 14142; Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi; Feldman, Diaspora Synagogues, 62; Habas (Rubin), Dedication of Polycharmos from Stobi, 4178. 43. Noy, JIWE, I, 7778; and below, Chap. 11.
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the inscription also mentions a triclinium, or dining room, which served, at the very least, as a place for communal meals and possibly as a general meeting place for other communal purposes as well. The term tetrastoon, a four-sided stoa, seems to refer to a courtyard or atrium, perhaps in some way connected to the triclinium. Finally, the building (or buildings) described in this inscription clearly had a second story, the upper chambers of which were reserved for use by Polycharmos family. Thus, it appears that Polycharmos was now ceding part of his home to the community at large. The inscription discusses details governing the arrangement between these two parties. One of the stipulations of this agreement requires an oender to pay an enormous sum of money to the Patriarcha reference, in all probability, to the third century Patriarch of Palestine (see below). If so understood, and this has been the most widely accepted interpretation to date (as against viewing the patriarch as a local ocial, noted in several laws in the Theodosian Code), the inscription constitutes an extremely important piece of evidence regarding the status and prestige of this oce toward the end of the third century, even in such a distant Diaspora community.44 The association of the Patriarch with the Stobi synagogue raises interesting questions regarding the relationship of this oce to the ancient synagogue generally; we shall return to this issue below (Chap. 12). In the early 1970s, excavations at the site were renewed after a forty-year hiatus, and it soon became clear that a synagogue building referred to in the inscription had once existed on this very site.45 In fact, it has been claimed that several stages of an earlier structure are discernible and include remains of an early second-century pavement, coins of Marcus Aurelius, a menorah-grato, and frescoes bearing the name Polycharmos in tabula ansata frames. A bronze votive plaque with the name Posidonia was found, and another such plaque bearing the name Eustathius, as well as a menorah, were discovered in a sewage canal. In any case, it would seem that Polycharmos houseand subsequently the synagogueincluded the aforementioned building south of the later church (referred to as the House of Psalms). What is not fully clear, however, is which stage should be associated with the abovementioned monumental inscription. Is it referring to a late second- or, as is usually assumed, a later third-century setting and structure? 46 This, in turn, is related to a date appearing in the inscription that, unfortunately, is partly obliterated. Over the years, scholarly consensus has focused on one of two alternatives, each dependent upon a different era as a basis for calculation: 163 c.e. or 280 c.e. Following Hengels detailed study in 1966, the latter date has been generally preferred.47 Before the third century, the Patri44. See generally, L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 132, esp. 13. Cf. also Goodman, Jews and Judaism in the Mediterranean Diaspora, 221. 45. Mano-Zissi, Stratigraphic Problems, 2089. 46. See White, Social Origins, 34356. 47. Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 11048. For a long period, the year 163 c.e. was widely preferred; see, for example, Frey, CIJ, I, 5047; Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 25152; II, 672; Baron,
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54. Plan of the Stobi synagogue, with the bima facing east.
arch, to the best of our knowledge, had no such status, and the enormous sum of money recorded would have been utterly inconceivable to demand. The outlines of the interior plan of the third- to fourth-century synagogue are detectable although, as yet, far from clear (g. 54). The hall measured 7.9 by 13.3 meters; in it was the base of what was probably a bima along the eastern wall and the remains of a bench along the southern wall. The walls themselves appear to have been frescoed with geometric and oral motifs and perhaps given decorative stucco moldings. A mosaic oor pavement also has geometric motifs. In addition, per the synagogue inscription, other large communal areas included a triclinium and a tetrastoon. Some time in the later fourth or possibly fth century, the synagogue was converted into a church.
Ostia
The synagogue of Ostia was excavated in 196162 under the direction of Squarciapino. Only a series of short preliminary reports in Italian and English appeared thereafter, and a nal report of the excavations has never been published.48 Nevertheless, over the last decade the Ostia synagogue has been the topic of much research and debate. White, in his work on ancient synagogues and churches, has studied this building extensively, and in a seminal article that appeared in 1997, he presented an alternative thesis to
Jewish Community, I, 84; III, 28 n. 24. More recently, Poehlman (Polycharmos Inscription, 23546) and Habas (Rubin) (Dedication of Polycharmos from Stobi, 4178) have again argued for a secondcentury date. See also White, Social Origins, 34648. 48. Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 1926; idem, Synagogue at Ostia, 194203; Fortis, Jews and Synagogues, 12128; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 497500; Noy, JIWE, I, no. 13; Fine and Della Pergola, Synagogue of Ostia, 4257; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 32236. See also Wischnitzer, Architecture of the European Synagogue, 57.
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that outlined by Squarciapino.49 At about the same time, the synagogue project at Lund University in Sweden, entitled The Ancient Synagogue: Birthplace of Two World Religions, under the direction of Olsson, adopted the Ostia synagogue as its joint research project. The brunt of this task was assigned to Runesson, who, having gained access to the original reports and documentation of the excavator, challenged Whites reconstruction, largely supporting Squarciapinos original conclusion.50 This then led to a series of intensive interchanges between White and Runesson, culminating in Runessons elaborate architectural presentation in a volume of studies on the Ostia synagogue and community.51 In addition, White has now undertaken a multi-year excavation of the Ostia synagogue and its environs; the results of this endeavor, called The Ostia SynagogueArea Masonry Analysis Project (OSMAP), will inevitably bring to light new material that will require revised explanations and reconstructions. The synagogue at Ostia is located outside the city wall, near the Porta Marina, i.e., close to the harbor that served Rome as well. Adjacent to the building on the north was the Via Severiana, an important coastal artery built around the turn of the third century. The synagogue remains visible today date to the fourth and fth centuries c.e., although there clearly were earlier stages, as far back as the rst and second centuries c.e. Since the major dierences in interpretation revolve around the rst stages of the buildings history, we will commence our description of the site with the later structure for which there is wide consensus (g. 55). The synagogue building measured 36.60 by 23.50 meters. The entrance from Via Severiana was anked by two small columns and led into a long vestibule (A), where a marble wellhead and well were found left of the entrance. On the right were a series of doors leading into the synagogues main rooms, with the rst three entrances leading into the sanctuary. This tripartite entranceway had a large central door anked by two smaller ones, reminiscent of the monumental portals in Sardis and Gerasa, as well as in many synagogues of Byzantine Galilee. This area contained several small rooms (B and C) partitioned by thin walls. A room to the right reportedly contained a large basin, perhaps serving as a ritual bath (miqveh), however it is not certain that it was in use at this stage. The central doorway gave entrance to the synagogues main hall (D, 15 by 12.50 meters)52 through two pairs of columns, a propylaeum of sorts, rising to a height of 4.70
49. White, Building Gods House, 6970; idem, Social Origins, 37994; idem, Synagogue and Society, 2358. 50. Runesson, Oldest Original Synagogue Building in the Diaspora: A Response to L. Michael White, 40933. 51. White, Reading the Ostia Synagogue: A Reply to Runesson, 43564; Runesson, Monumental Synagogue, 171220; idem, Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 2999. For a comparison of these approaches, see Mitternacht, Current Views, 53344. 52. Following Runesson, Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 52. White lists 14.31 by 12.50 meters (Synagogue and Society, 30).
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meters (C). A raised podium or bima was located along the far wall, i.e., along the slightly curved wall at the western end of the main hall; just south of the propylaeum, on a podium, was a large apsidal aedicula in which the Torah scrolls were undoubtedly housed. The symbols carved on two corbels (at the end of the architraves extending from the apse) include a menorah, shofar, lulav, and ethrog. There is some dispute as to whether the aedicula is to be dated to the general fourth-century renovation or, perhaps, to a later stage (i.e., late fourthearly fth centuries). A small fragment of a stone lion was found on the oor of the main hall, although its original location is unknown. The oor of the hall was decorated in part with opus sectile marble slabs in secondary use (some of which bore inscriptions, presumably from other buildings) and in part with a black and white mosaic oor on which a Solomons knot was depicted, while two columns were found in the debris and may have stood in the middle of the hall. No benches dating to this period were found here. South of the main hall was a kitchen (G) in which an oven, a marble-topped table, and ve lamps decorated with menorot were found. Several oors were uncoveredan earlier mosaic one and a later earthen one; the dating of each remains uncertain. West of the kitchen were small (F) and large (E) rooms with mosaic oors. Benches lined the southern and western walls of Room E, and it has been suggested that it may have served as a
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place of study, a social hall, a hostel, and almost certainly as a triclinium, but there is no rm evidence to support any of these identications.53 Regarding the earlier phases, there is sharp disagreement between Squarciapino, generally followed by Runesson on the one hand, and White on the other. Squarciapino had proposed from the outset that the building was erected as a synagogue some time in the mid to later rst century c.e. It originally boasted a large main hall (D) with benches on three sides, a podium (bima? ) along part of the slightly curved western wall, and a fourcolumned entranceway; south of this main hall was a triclinium, also having benches on three sides (Room G and the southern part of Room B), and to the east, near the entrance, was a well and cistern. The original stage of the synagogue building was followed by an intermediary phase dating to some time in the second, and possibly early third, centuries. Evidence of this phase include fragmentary remains of painted walls and mosaic paving, the partitioning of several areas in Rooms B and C, the addition of a basin in Room B (a miqveh?), and the removal of the benches from Room G.54 However, the most important nd here is an inscription that speaks of the existence of a holy ark. Found on a reused marble stone on the fourth-century vestibule oor (A), it consists of a rst line in Latin followed by four in Greek, and reads as follows:
For the safety of the Emperor [pro salute Aug(usti)]. Mindius Faustus with his family built and made [it] from his own gifts, and set up the ark [ ] for the holy law.55
The name Mindius Faustus was added to the last two lines of the inscription, and it seems quite evident that he restored the ark or possibly an entire aedicula housing the ark that had existed beforehand.56 If, as is generally assumed, the wording of the opening lines most likely reects a late second- or early third-century usage, then the addition of Faustus in the last two lines should be dated to the later third century. With the building of a monumental aedicula in the fourth century, the older ark and its accompanying dedicatory inscription became redundant and the latter was reused in the vestibule renovation (g. 56).57 White, in contrast, oers an entirely dierent reconstruction of the buildings history. In the rst place, he claims that the initial structure dating to the later rst or early sec53. Runesson suggests that a building to the immediate west of the synagogue (K) may have been associated with it, serving perhaps as a place of residence for one of its ocials (Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 6263). 54. See Runesson, Monumental Synagogue, 216; idem, Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 85. 55. Noy, JIWE, I, no. 13. 56. Ibid., 2425. See also White, Synagogue and Society, 3942. 57. See, however, Runessons cautionary remarks regarding this inscription (Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 8588).
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
ond century was originally a two-story private dwelling. It was part of the insula complex and may not have served the Jewish community at this stage. The walls were built in opus reticulatum, typical of the Flavian and early Antonine periods, and the main room (D) and perhaps also its adjoining kitchen date to this rst period. Only in the latter part of the second or early third century was the building converted into a synagogue, at which time benches, a bima, and a (permanent?) ark (following the Mindius Faustus inscription) were added to the main hall (D). Finally, in the late third or early fourth century, the synagogue underwent a major renovation: the rst-oor ceiling was removed, aording the main sanctuary a monumental appearance. The four large columns were erected at this point, and new partition walls were introduced. Later stages featured the opus vittatum and opus latericium, which were common styles in the third and fourth centuries. The synagogue premises were now greatly expanded with the addition of Rooms A, E, and F. Further embellishment took place toward the latter half of the fourth century, when the large aedicula was built.58 Given this considerable discrepancy in reconstructing the early history of the building, it can only be hoped that either continued excavations or the appearance of the nal excavation reports (ideally both) will be able to clarify the various stages in the buildings history. Nevertheless, on the basis of what we know about this synagogue, it is clear that it had much in common with other Ostian buildings that served the forty or so professional and religious guilds in the city for which we have some evidence.59 The main functions of such guilds revolved around worship, banquets, and meetings. A guild might meet in a private home (domus) or in a more public and monumental setting such as the synagogue, at least
58. White, Social Origins, 39091; idem, Synagogue and Society, 36. 59. See Hermansen, Ostia, 5589. See also Richardson (Architectural Case, 97), who notes sixty.
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in its later phases. The larger guild buildings had a peristyle courtyard with cenatoria, or sanctuaries for worshipping the gods, in adjacent rooms; if there was a main sanctuary, it might have taken the form of either a large room or a plan reminiscent of a traditional temple. Some guild facilities served as hostels as well. The availability of water was an important prerequisite for such groups, and wells, cisterns, and water basins were therefore ubiquitous; the synagogue, as noted, had similar facilities from the outset. Kitchens were discovered in at least three of these guild buildings. Most guild houses were small, with only one, albeit large, room that was used for both religious and social activities. Given the widespread presence of diverse guilds in this port city, it is not surprising that the local Jewish community was inuenced by elements from nearby structures as well as guild practices, and adapted them to its own needs. Two additional inscriptions found in Ostia proper may seem to have a bearing on the synagogue and its leadership. In 1969, an inscription mentioning a local archisynagogos was found south of the city. Given the fact that many family details are noted in the inscription, it seems certain that the person honored, one Plotius, must have been a local resident who was also a synagogue ocial, and not some foreign merchant who happened to be in the vicinity when he died. The inscription reads as follows:
For Plotius Fortunatus, the archisynagogos Plotius Ampliatus, Plotius Secundinus, and Secunda made [the monument] . . . , and Olia Basilia for her well-deserving husband.60
Found in the early twentieth century and usually dated to the second century c.e., the inscription notes that land was given by the Ostian Jewish community to one Gaius Julius Justus to build a funerary monument. The titles of several ocials are mentioned; two are called gerousiarchs and one pater (synagoges). The plaque on which this inscription appears is typical of funerary plaques in this Ostian necropolis, as are the names of the people mentioned and their titles. Such titles are well attested in local collegia as well.
60. Noy, JIWE, I, no. 14. See Squarciapino, Plotius Fortunatus, 18391; V. B. Mann, Gardens and Ghettoes, 211. 61. Noy, JIWE, I, no. 18. See the comments of White, Synagogue and Society, 4248; Runesson, Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 8889.
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Bova Marina
At the toe of the Italian peninsula, some fty kilometers south of Reggio di Calabria, a synagogue was discovered in 1985.62 Located near a Roman villa, northeast of which stood a small necropolis, it appears that the site had been inhabited since the second century c.e., although no architectural remains have survived. The excavators identied two distinct stages in the buildings history. In the fourth century, a series of rectangular rooms and enclosed spaces adjoined a central hall; they probably constituted the synagogues ancillary rooms (referred to by the excavators as service rooms) and entranceways. The central mosaic oor of the synagogue hall was decorated with geometric designs and plaited borders with wreath-like decorations. Rosettes and a Solomons knot were also represented, along with the central design of a menorah, shofar, lulav, and ethrog. The synagogue complex was altered in the sixth century: many of the ancillary rooms were redesigned, three of the rectangular spaces continued to adjoin the hall, and one of the oors to the south was replaced. The atrium of the synagogue seems to have been located in the south, and thus the entire complex was probably architecturally oriented in that direction. A number of rooms were also found northwest of the hall, as in the earlier stage. The main hall of the synagogue was oriented in a northwest-southeast direction. It was signicantly remodeled in this stage, with the addition of a semicircular niche, a bima, and what appears to be a parapet or chancel screen (g. 57). The menorah decoration continued to be featured in this stage as well. Though largely obliterated, it remains clearly recognizable. Its three-legged base was preserved, as were traces of some of its upper branches, and other Jewish symbols anked the menorah. Two amphora handles with menorah impressions were also found, and over three thousand bronze coins were discovered in one of the ancillary rooms. The building ceased to exist around the year 600, when the entire area appears to have been abandoned.
Naro (ammam-Lif )
Located about eighteen kilometers south of Tunis, this North African synagogue was discovered in 1883 by French soldiers stationed in the area.63 The sanctuary, which
62. Lattanzi, Neapolis, 41921; Costamagna, Seminari di archeologia cristiana, 31317; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 3435, 2045. 63. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 89100; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 4748, 2079, 4089. See also Biebel, Mosaics of Hammam Lif, 54151; Dunbabin, Mosaics of Roman North Africa, 194 n. 32; Foerster, Survey of Ancient Diaspora Synagogues, 171; Le Bohec, Inscriptions juives, nos. 1315; Darmon, Les mosaques de la synagogue de Hammam Lif, 729. It should be noted that this building has not been seen in situ since soon after its discovery. The oor was cut into panels and sold to museums and private collectors; a large part of the main mosaic is found today in the Brooklyn Museum. All subsequent descriptions derive from several early sketches, which are identical for the
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was part of a villa complex, was constructed perhaps as early as the fourth or fth century but possibly as late as the sixth. The complex had over a dozen rooms, and in its center was the main hall (5.25 by 9 meters) located at the end of an elaborate entranceway. On its western side was an apse; two small rooms were located o the main hall to the east, one of which contained the following mosaic inscriptions in Latin: Instruments of Thy servant the Naronitian. / Instruments of Thy servant from Naro [?]. These lines are set in panels resembling opened books, perhaps a representation of an open Torah scroll. It is thus quite possible that the Torah scrolls (the instrumenta) were kept in this room. The mosaic oors throughout the complex are generally plain, except for an elaborate pavement in the main hall that featured two outer panels with vines in the shape of acanthus leaves emanating in pairs from four vases, themselves shaped like acanthus leaves (g. 58). Among the tendrils are animals (a lion, ducks, pelicans, other birds, etc.) and baskets of fruits and vegetables. Between these end panels are two more horizontally divided ones; the upper panel depicts a partially preserved scene of sh, ducks, water, plants, and a bull, and perhaps some land, as well as a wheel or star, with an object interpreted by some as the hand of God. The lower panel contains two peacocks standing at the edge of an amphora-shaped fountain anked by trees,64 and has been interpreted as representmost part but have some discrepancies between them; see Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, III, nos. 887 and 888. On the fate of these mosaics, see Wharton, Erasure, 20910. 64. For an eschatological interpretation of this scene, see Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 96. See also Kanof, Jewish Ceremonial Art, 27.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
ing either heaven, paradise, the messianic days, or the creation story. Whatever the case, these panels display some remarkable parallels with mosaics from contemporary Christian churches in North Africa.65 Between these last two panels, at the very center of the mosaic design, is the most prominent Latin inscription in this building: Your servant Juliana p[?] at her own expense paved with mosaic the holy synagogue of Naro for her salvation. Another inscription, found in the entranceway, mentions one Asterius, son of the archisynagogue Rusticus, and his wife Margarita, daughter of Riddeus, who together paved part of the portico with mosaic.
Elche
Although rst discovered in 1905 on the southeastern coast of Spain, the identication of this building as a church or synagogue has been a subject of controversy for some time.66 In recent decades, however, scholarly opinion has generally come to view these remains as those of a synagogue, although the original identication as a church by ex65. Dunbabin, Mosaics of Roman North Africa, 19495; see also Belz, Marine Genre Mosaic Pavements. 66. Fernndez, Ciudad Romana de Ilici, 24144; Burgos, Sinagogas espaolas, 21216; Rabello, Le iscrizioni ebraiche, 65962 (= Situation of Jews in Roman Spain, 18286); D. A. Halperin, Synagogues of the Iberian Peninsula, 2628; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 4547, 2057, 4078. Varying numbers are given by Fernndez, Burgos, and Hachlili for the sizes of the mosaic panels; we have followed Fernndez. For a general survey of the Jews in Spain in Late Antiquity, see Rabello, Situation of Jews in Roman Spain, 16090.
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cavator Pedro Ibarra still carries considerable weight, especially within Spanish academic circles. The rectangular hall of this building measures 10.9 by 7.55 meters and is oriented in an east-west direction, with a portal in the west and an apse in the east (g. 59). The apse, which is 3 meters wide and 2.1 meters deep, and preserved to a height of ca. 1 meter, connects with the main synagogue mosaic on its southern side; near the western wall of the building, a basin was found set into the mosaic oor. This oor features many geometric designs (especially braids, mazes, and diamonds) and has rectangular, square, octagonal, and round frames interspersed throughout. One of its prominent motifs is a series of knots, including a Solomons knot. The mosaic oor appears to have been arranged in three parallel panels stretching over the length of the hall on an east-west axis. The northern panel is 2.45 meters wide; the central one is 3.2 meters wide; and the third, to the south, is 2.25 meters wide. This division corresponds with three inscriptions found in the main hall (see below) and thus may not have been fortuitous. One obvious explanation is that the three parts were contributed by dierent groups or individuals named in each inscription. The arrangement of the mosaic oor as well as its dominant patterns are reminiscent of other Spanish mosaics of the late Roman era. At Palencia and Bobadilla, as well as at Elche itself, large villa pavements with identical ornamentations and arrangements have been found. Because of this striking resemblance, it has been suggested that these mosaics were made by artisans of the same school. If this is the case, then there is little justication for assuming a late Byzantine date for this building, or for accounting for its decoration by positing some external Byzantine inuence. Its similarity to other mosaics from Roman Spain suggests that this synagogue mosaic stems from a late Roman workshop and dates to the fourth century. Presumably, the apse was added somewhat later, perhaps in the fth century, and by the seventh, the building seems to have been converted into a church. Identication of this building as a synagogue is based upon the three inscriptions found in the mosaic pavement.
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1. Place of prayer [ proseuche] of the people . . . This inscription was found along the eastern edge of the mosaic oor, facing the congregation. The second line is illegible, but the term proseuche in the rst line is the major factor in determining the Jewish identication of the building. The inscription is set in a tabula ansata frame, and a leaf, perhaps an ethrog, is incised on the righthand side of this line. Whether a similar design appeared on the lefthand side as well, or underneath it, at the extremities of the second, obliterated line, is unknown. 2. Vow of the archons and presbyters This inscription was found on the northern side of the hall, also facing the congregation. Although the last word is somewhat mutilated (and also grossly misspelled), both Lifshitz and Noy agree that presbyters is the most likely reading. Both archons and presbyters appear very frequently in Jewish inscriptions, although the precise delineation between the functions of each might well vary from region to region. Wischnitzer has suggested that the seats of these synagogue ocials may have, in fact, been located along this northern wall.67 3. A good voyage to you, Sy [. . .], the fortunate This inscription is located on the southern edge of the mosaic pavement and runs east to west so that it, like the others, could be read by someone standing in the center of the hall. It was probably dedicated by an itinerant who may have contributed to the building. This euploia (lit., good voyage) inscription belongs to a well-known genre and, as might be expected, is especially ubiquitous in coastal areas. One interesting nd is a 45-centimeter-high stone base, with a 910-centimeter-deep square cavity, which was found in the area of the apse. It has been suggested that this stone may have been used as a charity box.
SYNAGOGUES OF ROME
While no synagogue building has survived from ancient Rome, the names of synagogues that once existed in the city, as well as the titles of numerous oces associated with them, have been preserved in the epigraphical evidence. The vast majority of these inscriptions were found in the Jewish catacombs (large burial sites) and hypogea (smaller burial sites) located in the southwestern, northeastern, and southern parts of todays city. Some six hundred inscriptions have been recovered, beginning with the discovery of the Monteverde catacomb in 1602. Most of these inscriptions, however, were discovered between 1859 and 1919.68 We know of three large communal catacombs: Monteverde in the southwestern section of Rome, near the Trastevere; Vigna Randanini in the southern
67. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 101; Noy, JIWE, II, no. 181; Wischnitzer, Architecture of the European Synagogue, 12. 68. Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 149.
284 h i s t o r i c a l d e v e l o p m e n t o f t h e s y n a g o g u e
part of the city, near the Via Appia; and the Villa Torlonia in the northeast, near the Via Nomentana.69 Three more hypogea were found in the latter part of the nineteenth century.70 In the past, these inscriptions were dated to the rst centuries c.e. 71 More recently, however, a consensus has developed whereby these catacombs date from the late second to fth centuries c.e. Solin has adopted this date on the basis of epigraphical and palaeographical considerations, Koniko on the basis of the style and artistic work in the fortyodd sarcophagi found, and Rutgers on the basis of the overall material culture of the catacombs, i.e., their plans, building techniques, burial styles, artwork (wall paintings, gold glass), and lamps, in addition to the various types of sarcophagi and inscriptions found therein.72 The synagogues of Rome are mentioned in some forty inscriptions.73 The precise number of attested Roman synagogues, however, is unclear and depends on the interpretation of a number of terms and the reconstruction of fragmentary references. Some identications are universally acknowledged; others are problematic and controversial. The number eleven is most often cited, but estimates range between ten and sixteen.74 Of particular interest are the names of the various synagogues. Some of these do, in fact, date back to the rst century and were either named after prominent individuals (Augustus, Agrippa, Volumnius, Herod?) or refer to the Synagogue of the Hebrews or that of the Vernaclesians (native-born Jews). These latter buildings are usually understood to have been among the earliest synagogues in the city. In later centuries, synagogues might have been named after the congregants place of origin (Tripoli? Rhodes? Elaea? Secenia? Arca of Lebanon?), trade (Calcaresianslimekiln workers), or local neighborhoods (Campesians, Siburesians). One late midrash notes a synagogue of Sev69. Platner and Ashby, Topographical Dictionary, passim. 70. See especially Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 4674; as well as Schrer, History, III, 9598; Smallwood, Jews under Roman Rule, 51925; M. Stern, Jews of Italy, 14348; Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 3233. 71. See also above, Chap. 4; and M. Stern, Jews of Italy, 144. 72. Solin, Juden und Syrer, 654721; Koniko, Sarcophagi, 1358; and Rutgers, berlegungen zu den jdischen Katakomben, 14057; idem, Archaeological Evidence, 10118; and now his comprehensive Jews in Late Ancient Rome. 73. Noy, JIWE, II, 53940. 74. For example, van der Horst (Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 88) speaks of ten synagogues; Schrer (History, III, 9698) of ten and possibly eleven; Leon ( Jews of Ancient Rome, 13566), Stern (Jews of Italy, 144), Noy ( JIWE, II, 53940 and comments to no. 1), Williams (Structure of Roman Jewry, 131; Organisation of Jewish Burials, 16668), Goodman (Roman Identity, 90*), and Lichtenberger (Organisationsformen, 1719) of eleven; Penna (Les juifs Rome, 327) of eleven and possibly thirteen; Vogelstein (Rome, 27) of twelve or thirteen; La Piana (Foreign Groups, 352 n. 22), Momigliano (I nomi delle prime sinagoghe, 284), Baron ( Jewish Community, I, 81), Westenholz (Synagogues, 2327), and Richardson, (Augustan-Era Synagogues, 19) of thirteen; and Feldman (Diaspora Synagogues, 51) of sixteen. See also Frey, Communauts juives Rome, 267.
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erus in Rome, which, if historical, would have honored one of the rulers of this dynasty, quite possibly Alexander Severus.75 Given the absence of actual buildings, we cannot be certain of the location of these synagogues. There is little doubt that many were situated on the right bank of the Tiber in Transtiberinum, one of the most crowded quarters of the city. Already in the rst century, Philo indicates that this was where most Jews were concentrated: How then did he [Augustus] show his approval? He was aware that the great section of Rome on the other side of the Tiber is occupied and inhabited by Jews, most of whom were emancipated Roman citizens. 76 Inscriptions naming seven synagogues were found in the nearby Monteverde catacomb, and thus it appears quite certain that most, if not all, must have been located in this general vicinity. This would include the synagogues of the Augustesians, Agrippesians, Calcaresians, Hebrews, Vernaclesians, Volumnesians, and Tripolitans.77 Two synagogues bear the names of sections of Rome and were most probably located in these areasthat of the Siburesians (Subura was a congested quarter known for its squalor, prostitutes, trade activity, andcontrastinglya few wealthy homes) and that of the Campesians (the Campus Martius was on the left bank of the Tiber).78 Finally, a reference by Juvenal to the presence of Jews in the Grove of Camenae near the Porta Capena, in the southern part of the city at the beginning of the Via Appia, has led to speculation that a Jewish community might have been located there as well.79 It is thus clear that most synagogues were located in the poorer, less desirable neighborhoods of the city, an indication of the relatively low socioeconomic status of most Jewsa fact documented in literary sources as well.80 Such sites stand in marked contrast to the central location of the monumental Sardis synagogue and the epigraphical evidence attesting to the prominence and prosperity of its members. Moreover, as against Alexandria and other urban centers, where the Jews tended to congregate in particular neighborhoods or sections of the city,81 Romes Jews were widely
75. Genesis Rabbati 45, 8 (p. 209). 76. Philo, Embassy 155. On this neighborhood in Late Antiquity, see MacMullen, Unromanized in Rome, 5658, 63. Regarding the more conservative character of this quarter, cf., however, Rajak, Inscriptions and Context, 23033. 77. M. Stern, Jews of Italy, 14446. 78. See Noy, JIWE, II, map 1; as well as Platner and Ashby, Topographical Dictionary, 9194, 500501. 79. Juvenal, Satires, III, 1018; M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 9798; idem, Jews of Italy, 147; Platner and Ashby, Topographical Dictionary, 405. Cf., however, Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 137 n. 1. 80. See the statements of Martial and Juvenal, in M. Stern, GLAJJ, I, nos. 239, 246; II, no. 299; and Lichtenberger, Organisationsformen, 1617. 81. Philo, Flaccus 55; Josephus, War 2, 488; Tcherikover et al., CPJ, III, nos. 454, 468; and Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 7980. Nevertheless, Philo does note that synagogues were located in many parts of the city, despite their concentration in the Delta quarter (Philo, Embassy 132; Josephus, Against Apion 2, 3337).
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scattered in disparate, autonomous synagogues. We know of no all-embracing gerousia in Rome, such as that which once controlled the aairs of Alexandrian Jewry or the politeuma of Berenice. The synagogues of Rome were thus self-sucient units. In no inscription is there any mention of a community-wide network, and in light of the large number of synagogues in the city, this absence is telling. The only possible hint of an overseeing body is when Paul reputedly summoned the leading men of the Jews ( ), those who were accustomed to receiving correspondence from Judaea.82 However, no central body is ever alluded to elsewhere, and it may well be that the heads of various synagogues were intended. Synagogue ocials are noted in approximately 130 inscriptions. Most frequently named is the archon (almost fty times), whose duties were primarily administrative, political, and scal. In addition, the oces of archisynagogos, pater, mater (if indeed an oce), scribe, gerousiarch, prostates, and others are noted. Judging by the number of ocials mentioned in these inscriptions, many Jews appear to have been involved in the synagogues functioning.83 Finally, a number of titles associated with children appear in catacomb inscriptions; these have no parallels in Jewish epigraphical evidence from elsewhere.84 The language of the Roman community, the names of synagogues, and the titles of ocials all indicate a signicant cultural integration into the larger Roman scene.85 Rather than viewing the Jews of this city as a distinct and isolated community, the material culture of the catacombs and their inscriptions have made eminently clear the extent to which they had absorbed many practices from their Roman surroundings into their material and organizational culture.86 Moreover, as was true of Greco-Roman associations generally, these Roman synagogues were far from homogeneous, not only in name, date of founding, and location, but also in their structure and organization; this is attested by the many titles and combinations thereof of those who stood at their head.87
BABYLONIAN SYNAGOGUES
Unlike for Rome, the evidence for the existence of Babylonian synagogues is entirely literary; there are no known archaeological nds or, for that matter, literary works
82. Acts 28:17, 21. 83. On these various oces generally, see below, Chap. 11. 84. Williams, Structure of Roman Jewry, 131. 85. See Goodman, Roman Identity, 85*99*; Noy, Writing in Tongues, 300311. 86. Williams, Organisation of Jewish Burials, 177; Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 9299. 87. See Williams, Structure of Roman Jewry, 13641, although her specic suggestions regarding synagogue ocials and their roles remain hypothetical. We unfortunately know nothing about the ceremonies and liturgy of these synagogues.
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(Jewish or non-Jewish) other than the Bavli that could attest to this institution in the emerging Jewish center in Babylonia. As a result, the information that does exist is severely limited in scope and reects only a rabbinic perspective. On the basis of this material, Gafni has developed an intriguing theory regarding the Babylonian synagogue. In contrast to what we have seen elsewhere, he assumes that this institution restricted its activity to the liturgical dimension, focusing almost exclusively on prayer and at times the reading of the Torah. Most other communal activities, ranging from the educational to the judicial and social, were associated with other institutions or ocials (see below). The only synagogue ocial noted, and even then on rare occasion, is the azzan. The plethora of ocial synagogue titles known from Palestine and the Roman Empire generally (especially that of the archisynagogue) are almost unknown from Babylonia.88 Moreover, whereas the synagogue was often singled out for attack by Christian mobs in the West, such was not the case in Babylonia owing to the institutions much lower communal prole there.89 In support of his argument, Gafni cites a discrepancy between two versions of a tradition wherein R. Simeon b. Gamaliel reputedly thwarts a Babylonian attempt at gaining calendrical independence.90 According to the Babylonian version, the confrontation between the Palestinian emissaries and ananiah, leader of this Babylonian revolt, took place in the bet midrash. However, the venue mentioned in the Yerushalmi (reecting a Palestinian reality) is where the Torah and haftarah were read, i.e., the synagogue. Whereas the Palestinian source assumes that the synagogue served as a communal and political center, the Bavli, for whom such a setting was foreign, placed this encounter in the academy. Another distinction is that the synagogue in the Roman Empire was considered public property, owned and controlled by the community either on a direct, democratic basis or, formally at least, via communal ocials representing the entire congregation. However, the situation in Sassanian Babylonia appears to have been far dierent. Ownership of a synagogue is often associated with individuals, even certain rabbis, and while not totally unknown in the West, this phenomenon seems to have been far more prevalent in Babylonia. At least ve Babylonian sages are clearly associated with synagogues, institutions that they had either built or dominated in one way or another.91 One statement, attributed to R. Ashi, is especially poignant in this regard. Commenting on the distinction between a village synagogue and an urban one, R. Ashi says: The synagogue of Mata Measiya [his place of residence], if I wish, I can sell it; even though people come from all over
88. See, however, Beer, Babylonian Exilarchate, 2122, 228 n. 20; Gafni, Jews of Babylonia, 97. 89. Gafni, Synagogues in Talmudic Babylonia, 22131. 90. Y Nedarim 6, 13, 40a. On the background of this tradition, see Oppenheimer, Galilee, 4553. Cf. B Berakhot 63ab. 91. B Megillah 26b; B Bava Batra 3b.
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[and thus it might be considered part of the public domain], they come with my consent [i.e., because of my presence]. 92 Gafni accounts for the unique Babylonian status of the synagogue by the fact that many functions assumed by synagogues in the West were being handled in Babylonia via a larger communal apparatus, either the Exilarch or the rabbinic academies. According to him, the court system, for example, operated for the most part under the latters aegis. Let us state at the outset that Gafnis thesis may indeed be valid, and Babylonias synagogues may well have functioned dierently from those elsewhere in Late Antiquity. However, there are several methodological issues that should be addressed before any rm conclusion can be drawn. For one, can we assume that a comparison between the Babylonian setting and others in the West (including Palestine) is a valid one on the basis of the data at hand? For the Roman world, we have a plethora of literary and archaeological material that oers a fairly broad picture of the range of activities in these synagogues. In contrast to the imposing physical remains of some 150 buildings, as well as the many hundreds of inscriptions and the wealth of literary evidence from diverse sources for the Roman-Byzantine synagogue, the evidence for Babylonia is meager. Other than the Bavli, Babylonia boasts no archaeological remains, no epigraphical evidence, no non-Jewish sources, no non-rabbinic sources, and not even another type of rabbinic source (e.g., a midrash). This imbalance, of which Gafni himself is quite aware,93 is so pronounced as to make any comparison between the Roman and Sassanian settings most problematic, if not impossible. If, nevertheless, one wishes to make some sort of comparison between Palestine and Babylonia, it might be preferable to do so on the basis of the Bavli and the Yerushalmi alone. We could then assume that there is some sort of parity between similar corpora of information for each locale. Indeed, once this limitation is imposed, some of the above distinctions become far less compelling. Many communal functions of the Palestinian synagogue do not nd expression in the Yerushalmi but do in other Palestinian sources: midrashic compilations, archaeological material, and non-Jewish sources. No less than the Bavli, the Yerushalmi concentrates almost exclusively on the synagogues liturgical activity. With regard to synagogue ocials, we know very little from either source, and, as a matter of fact, it is the Bavlimore so than the Yerushalmithat often tells us more about this subject with regard to Palestine. On the basis of such a comparison, it is hard to claim that the picture reected in the Bavli is dramatically dierent from that in the Yerushalmi.94 Moreover, some of the information that we have in the Yerushalmi regarding nonliturgical synagogue matters in Palestine also nds expression in the Bavli with regard to
92. B Megillah 26a. On the location of the synagogue, see Oppenheimer, Babylonia Judaica, 41521. 93. Gafni, Synagogues in Talmudic Babylonia, 22426. 94. Ibid., 225.
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Babylonia. This includes the presence of a azzan, the existence of a school on synagogue premises, and several activities: serving meals, perhaps acting as a place of lodging, and recording synagogue destruction.95 Thus, the Bavli may not be describing a very dierent reality, but is itself a poor basis of comparison with the rich harvest of sources from the Roman Empire (Palestine included). A second basic issue that must be addressed is the role of rabbis in Babylonia and Palestine generally, and with respect to the synagogue in particular. Gafni has correctly highlighted one basic distinction between the Bavli on the one hand and Palestinian rabbinic and non-rabbinic sources on the other, namely, the centrality of the synagogue in comparison to other communal institutions. However, this distinction can be taken one step further. That the Bavli has undergone a far more extensive and thorough redaction than the Yerushalmi from a literary point of view is well known. In addition, one gets the distinct impression that this document also focuses much more exclusively on the rabbinic world than do its Palestinian counterparts. The Bavli seems to concentrate on rabbinic concerns and interests to a degree unknown in corresponding Palestinian sources, which appear to have had a wider scope and agenda.96 Examples of this proclivity are legion and are reected in some of the citations noted above. For example, when speaking of the Persian destruction of Jewish institutions, emphasis in the Bavli and Rav Sheriras letter is placed on the sages and their academies as well as on the Exilarch. Furthermore, in speaking of mothers who bring their children to study, it is the Bavli which notes that their husbands were studying in the academy at the same time.97 Finally, an example from synagogue liturgical life might also be relevant. With respect to public fast-day ceremonies as described in the Mishnah, the elder ( )who ideally is to lead in prayer is identied in the Bavli as being a sage.98 In contrast, the Yerushalmi oers a denition that includes a far wider circle of people.99 If this is the case, then with regard to broader issues, such as the role of various nonrabbinic institutions in Babylonian society, one may ask to what extent the Bavli can be relied upon as oering any sort of balanced and accurate picture. It is not unlikely, given its tendentiousness, that it might well ignore or downplay these other frameworks in favor of a more focused rabbinic agenda, even though this may not necessarily have been the larger communitys perception. And so with regard to the synagogue as a communal institution:
95. azzan: B Eruvin 74b (cf. also 55b; B Yoma 11a); B Berakhot 53a; and perhaps B Arakhin 6b, though the term used here ( ) does not appear in several MSS (see Oppenheimer, Babylonia Judaica, 357; Gafni, Synagogues in Talmudic Babylonia, 226 n. 15). School: B Berakhot 17a (though the term synagogue does not appear in all manuscript traditions or in the parallel in B Sotah 21a). Meals and lodging: B Pesaim 101a. Destruction of synagogues: B Yoma 10a; Iggeret Rav Sherira Gaon (p. 97). 96. See Kalmin, Sage in Jewish Society, 114, 2750. 97. See previous note; and Gafni, Synagogues in Talmudic Babylonia, 22629. 98. M Taanit 2, 2; B Taanit 16a. 99. Y Taanit 2, 2, 65b.
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the rabbis of Babylonia might not have had recourse to this building except for worship (and even then not always), and thus the synagogue is given short shrift in the Bavli. A number of scholarsBaron, Beer, and Neusner, as well as Gafnihave rightly pointed to some special characteristics of Babylonian Jewry, its sages, and, indirectly, its synagogue.100 The presence of the Exilarchate, with the prestige and power accrued by this oce, was a most unusual phenomenon in the Diaspora world of Late Antiquity. Ranked high in the Sassanian court and granted extensive control over Jewish life and institutions, the Exilarch was recognized by all (although not always with equanimity) as the most prominent gure within the Jewish community. It was because of their generally privileged relationship with the Exilarch that the rabbis gained for themselves communal stature throughout the Babylonian Jewish world. Their judicial decisions were often given his ocial backing, and they seem to have enjoyed a high degree of recognition religiously, politically, and very often materially.101 This might help to explain one of the most intriguing aspects of the Babylonian synagogue noted abovethe ownership of synagogues by rabbis. However, it was certainly not the case with all, or even most, Babylonian rabbis, and the relatively few who are actually mentioned in this regard may possibly come close to exhausting the list. It admittedly is a most unique phenomenon, and the key to understanding it may lie in the surrounding Sassanian culture. However, this reality should not blur the fact that most synagogues in Babylonia may indeed have functioned as communal facilities. The Exilarch does not seem to have been involved in synagogue aairs, and the rabbis themselves related to the synagogue in much the same way as did their Palestinian counterparts.102 They participated either by preaching or by answering queries regarding synagogue practice.103 On the other hand, they do not seem to have been responsible for or involved in the actual operation of these institutions.104 In a number of instances, they were taken aback by unfamiliar local liturgical practices and reluctantly acquiesced in situations not to their liking.105 The most striking account in this regard tells of four third-century sages, Rav, Samuel, Samuels father, and Levi, who used to pray in the Shaf ve-Yativ synagogue in Nehardea even though there was a statue there.106
100. Gafni, Synagogues in Talmudic Babylonia, 229; idem, Court Cases, 2340; idem, Jews of Babylonia, 53. Similar discussions have appeared elsewhere: Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, II, 19598; Beer, Babylonian Amoraim, 5793; Neusner, Talmudic Judaism, 46. 101. See, for example, B Shabbat 119a; B Rosh Hashanah 31b; B Yevamot 95a; B Ketubot 85a; B Bava Qama 113a; B Bava Batra 167a; B Sanhedrin 7b; B Makkot 16b; and Neusner, History of the Jews in Babylonia, II, 111.; III, 12630, 272.; IV, 125., 30915; V, 244. See also Beer, Babylonian Amoraim, 22257. 102. B Berakhot 6b, 7b8a; B Megillah 26b; and below, Chap. 13. 103. B Megillah 21b; B Pesaim 117b; B Sukkah 55a. 104. Neusner, Talmudic Judaism, 8791. 105. For example, B Megillah 22b; B Taanit 28b. 106. On this synagogue, see B Rosh Hashanah 24b; B Avodah Zarah 43b; as well as Oppenheimer, Babylonia Judaica, 29091; idem, Babylonian Synagogues, 4043.
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Furthermore, the Bavli may alludehowever eetinglyto existing communal frameworks that might have had something to do with the synagogue, as, for example, the seven good men of the town ( if this was, in fact, a Babylonian institution) or the local town council ( ) which had to give its assent to Ravina when he wanted to erect a building on the lot of a former synagogue.107 There is also the somewhat enigmatic distinction accorded to Ada bar Ahava by R. Joseph, that he should leave worldly matters to laymen while he attends to heavenly matters. 108 At times, Babylonian rabbis would praise the synagogue and strongly encourage their colleagues to attend, or they would openly declare their preference for praying within their own academies or at home, and not in the synagogue. This was equally true of Palestinian sages, and at least in this respect the rabbinic elite diered little from one country to the next. On the basis of the above, it is quite possible that synagogues were peripheral to the Babylonian sages and thus largely ignored in the Bavli, not necessarily because the institution was of marginal importance in the life of the general community, but rather because the rabbis themselves were only minimally involved in its aairs. It must be remembered that talmudic sages were relatively new to Babylonia. The Jewish community had already existed there for many centuries and undoubtedly had developed traditions of its own, including synagogue customs. Synagogues bearing names associated with events of Jewish history from the Exilic and post-Exilic periods are indications of the deep roots that the local community claimed to have inherited and of their synagogues alleged sanctity.109 Thus, the Babylonian sage Abbaye explicitly locates the Shekhinah in two specic synagogues in the towns of Hutzal and Nehardea.110 The Babylonian sages, perhaps more so than their Palestinian counterparts, had other non-synagogal outlets for their communal activities. In addition to their academies, active rabbinic involvement in the local court system oered them the opportunity to aect communal life in a myriad of ways.111 The synagogues thus appear to have played a minor role in their lives, and thusin light of the sources at our disposalwe should be cautious in extrapolating information from their particular circumstances and applying it to Babylonian Jewry in general.
107. B Megillah 26b. 108. B Qiddushin 76b. See also Gafni, Jews of Babylonia, 117. 109. On the synagogues of Shaf ve-Yativ, Daniel, and Hutzal, for example, see Oppenheimer, Babylonian Synagogues, 4048. Regarding Babylonian local patriotism generally, see Gafni, Land, Center and Diaspora, 5257. 110. B Megillah 29a. On the sanctity ascribed to synagogues in the Bavli, see Fine, This Holy Place, 11926. 111. Gafni, Public Sermons, 12129; idem, Court Cases, 2340. See also Goodblatt, Rabbinic Instruction, 17196.
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The number of synagogues in each city was usually a function of the size and geographical concentration of the Jewish community. Larger communities undoubtedly boasted many more than one synagogue. The Diaspora communities of Alexandria and Rome had many proseuchai or synagogues, as was the case in Sepphoris, Tiberias, Lydda, and presumably Caesarea in Palestine.119 Not only was the synagogue central to internal Jewish communal life, but it attracted non-Jews as well. Church fathers repeatedly warn their ocks to distance themselves from Jews and Judaism. Ignatius so remonstrates with church members in Philadelphia (Asia Minor), and the author of the Martyrdom of Pionius admonishes Christians not to seek refuge in synagogues during persecutions.120 Origen cautions Christians not to discuss on Sunday matters they had heard raised the previous day in the synagogue or to partake of meals in both church and synagogue,121 while Ephrem is distressed with members of the church who are attracted to Jewish customs and feasts.122 Dramatic instances of this attraction to Judaism in Late Antiquity are attested in several cities.123 The two monumental inscriptions found on a marble block in Aphrodisias records the names of 68 Jews, 3 proselytes, and 54 gentile God-fearers (theosebeis) who
119. See above, Chap. 6. 120. To the Philadelphians 6, 1; Martyrdom of Pionius 13. For other examples, see Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 2732; Wilson, Related Strangers, 15968. 121. Hom. Lev. 5, 8; Select. Exod. 12, 46. 122. Drijvers, Syrian Christianity, 141. On the close relations between Jews and Christians in Asia Minor, see Sheppard, Jews, Christians and Heretics, 16980; Chaniotis, Jews of Aphrodisias, 20942. See also Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 8589; Figueras, Epigraphic Evidence, 198203. The evidence from the Bosphorus Kingdom in Late Antiquity is intriguing though inconclusive. Some fteen inscriptions dating from the second and third centuries c.e. relate to religious associations (thiasoi ) of Theos Hypsistos. Whether these were Jewish or pagan groups, or perhaps Jewishly inspired associations of the Most High God consisting mainly, if not exclusively, of God-fearers, has been a matter of dispute. In all events, the dominance of this cult in third-century Tanais is clearly evidenced in the statement that 85% of all the dedications to the gods in Tanais were made to the Most High God, while if we take into consideration private dedications only, the gure is even more impressive100%. The number of members of thiasoi in Tanais shows that nearly all the male population of the city in the IIIrd century were adherents of the Most High God (Levinskaya and Tokhtasyev, Jews and Jewish Names, 73 n. 84). See more generally Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 11116, 24246. 123. For a broad overview of this phenomenon, see Feldman, Jew and Gentile, 383445. Mitchell has pointed to a second, complementary dimension, namely, not only the appeal of Diaspora Judaism but its accommodation to various regnant forms and patterns within the religious traditions of their neighbors: But in the arena of secular life it is transparently clear that diaspora Jewry in the Hellenistic and imperial periods achieved a remarkable level of integration into the social and political life of the Greek cities and other indigenous communities of the Near East. The argument of this paper shows that this integration also took place in religious practice. The Jews of the Dispersion had found a common religious language with a vast number of Gentile worshippers, and they forged a shared tradition, current throughout the eastern Mediterranean, of monotheistic worship. By any denition this was one of the most spectacular demonstrations of religious syncretism that the ancient world has to oer (Cult of Theos Hypsistos, 121).
294 h i s t o r i c a l d e v e l o p m e n t o f t h e s y n a g o g u e
contributed to a memorial erected by their association (dekany). The memorial () was presumably a building (or part of one) that was used as a patella (lit., dish), perhaps a soup kitchen for relief of suering in the community. 124 On one side of the stone the Jewish members of this dekany are listed, while on the other, following a break in the text, are the names of the proselytes and fty-four God-fearers, the rst nine of whom are identied as city councilors ( ). Thus, we have here conclusive proof of a group of gentile God-fearers, of high rank and signicant number, who were publicly and actively associated with the local Jewish community. Similarly, according to one interpretation of a second-century inscription from Panticapaeum in the Crimea, God-fearers are noted alongside Jews as witnesses to manumission procedures in the local synagogue.125 If the emerging consensus is that we are dealing here with fourthfth century inscriptions, and not third-century ones, then this evidence is even more striking. Well into the Byzantine period, this Jewish community continued to ourish, attracting large numbers of pagan/Christian sympathizers.126 No less revealing is the situation in Antioch toward the end of the fourth century. In 386387, John Chrysostom, recently ordained as a priest, delivered a series of vituperative sermons against members of his church (and indirectly against Jews and Judaism) whom he accused of judaizing.127 He spoke of the synagogue (as well as of Jewish souls) as a dwelling place of demons, a hideout for thieves, and a den of wild animals. 128 According to Chrysostom, Jewish festivals seem to have had a seductive attraction for Christians; many, especially women, were ensnared on those occasions.129 Synagogues were
124. Williams (Jews and Godfearers, 30410) suggests that the dekany was, in fact, a burial society and that the memorial in question was a triclinium. A dekany is also mentioned in Rome; see Noy, JIWE, II, no. 440. 125. Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 6566. Cf., however, Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 7476; and above, Chap. 4. The Miletus theater inscription has been variously interpreted to refer to Jews and God-fearers; Jews who were also called God-fearers, and God-fearers who were also called Jews. See Schrer, History, III, 16768. 126. Until fairly recently, it has been generally assumed that these inscriptions were written in the early third century. See Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 1923; Schrer, History, III, 2526; White, Building Gods House, 8889; Rajak, Jewish Community, 2021; Feldman, Jew and Gentile, 36769; J. J. Collins, Feldman, Jew and Gentile (review), 718; Mussies, Jewish Personal Names, 25576. However, a growing body of scholarly opinion now places these inscriptions squarely in the Byzantine period. A fourth-century date has been suggested by Botermann (Griechisch-Jdische Epigraphik, 18494); Bonz (Jewish Donor Inscriptions, 28591) a third- and fth-century setting; Chaniotis (Jews of Aphrodisias, 20942) a fourth- and fth-century date. 127. See also Simon, Recherches, 14053; Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 3035; Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 6694; Brndle, Christen und Juden, 14260; Harkins, Prolegomenon, xxxviiixlvii. 128. Adv. Iud. 1, 34, 7. 129. Ibid., 2, 3; 4, 7. See Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 9294; Simon, Verus Israel, 32627. As
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compared to theaters, houses of prostitution, and idolatrous temples, where debauchery and drunkenness reigned supreme.130 The synagogues spell derives from what Wilken has referred to as its numinous power, 131 a trait apparently widely associated with this institution in Christian circles. From Chrysostoms fulminations, it is clear that Christian recourse to the synagogue was a widespread phenomenon that angered church ocials and undermined their authority.132 Such powers, of course, were intimately linked to Jewish healing procedures that were closely associated in the ancient world with magic. Jewish involvement in this realm throughout Late Antiquity is well documented and has gained even further attention since the publication of Sefer Harazim, Jewish amulet and incantation texts, etc.133 Much to Chrysostoms consternation,134 Christians preferred signing contracts and taking oaths in synagogues. He tells the story of intercepting one Christian who was taking another into the synagogue for such a purpose and of remonstrating with the former for his intentions. Chrysostoms version of the Christians reply is telling: Many had told him that oaths which were taken there were more awesome. 135 This phenomenon of Christian attraction to Judaism was found not only in the few cities noted above. At about the same time (i.e., the late fourthearly fth centuries), the Apostolic Constitutions listed the following decrees: no Christian (clergy or laity) is to enter the synagogue to pray; no clergy is to feast with the Jews or participate in their festivals; no Christian is to light synagogue lamps on Jewish holidays.136 The reality behind such declarations indicates that some Christians in the East expressed a profound interest in and identication with the synagogue and Jewish practices. Especially irritating to Christian clergy was the ocking of the local population to the synagogue on Sabbaths and holidays. Origen vigorously condemns such practice, as does Chrysostom with regard to his congregants participation in synagogue rituals on
will be remembered, this phenomenon also occurred in rst-century Damascus (Josephus, War 2, 559 61; see above, Chap. 4). 130. Adv. Iud. 1, 34. 131. Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 94. 132. Adv. Iud. 1, 7. 133. Simon, Verus Israel, 33968; Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 8388. See also Schrer, History, III, 34279; Margalioth, Sepher Ha-Razim; Naveh and Shaked, Amulets and Magic Bowls; idem, Magic Spells and Formulae. 134. Adv. Iud. 1, 3: Three days ago (believe me, I am not saying) I saw a noble and free woman, who is modest and faithful, being forced into a synagogue by a coarse and senseless person who appeared to be a Christian (I would not say that someone who dared to do such things was really a Christian). He forced her into a synagogue to make an oath about certain business matters which were in litigation (Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 90). 135. Adv. Iud. 1, 3. See also Simon, Verus Israel, 355. 136. Apostolic Constitutions VIII, 47, 65, 70, 71, in: A. Roberts et al., Ante-Nicene Fathers, 504.
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Sabbaths, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot, Passover, and fast days.137 He likewise notes the circumcision of Christians and their use of Jewish ritual baths.138 There were few secrets, even in a city the size of Antioch, and people were well aware of the habits of their neighbors.139 Wilken describes this situation rather pointedly:
If Christians were going around the corner to attend the synagogue, this meant that the divine was more tangibly present in the synagogue than in churches. If churches were empty because the Jews were celebrating their high holy days, this suggested that the Jewish way was more authentic. If the Christians used the Jewish calendar to set the date of a Christian festival, this could only mean that the Jews had the true calendar. In such a setting there was no middle ground, no accommodation between Jews and Christians, because the claims of the two religions were being negotiated not in the tranquility of the scholars study but in the din of the citys streets. When churches were empty and the synagogue lled, it was not a secret but public knowledge passed on in the shops and bazaars of the city.140
At the heart of this numinous attraction was the view that synagogues were indeed sacred places. Chrysostom mockingly calls them sacred shrines. 141 This sacredness, he suggests, is derived from the presence of the Torah and the books of the Prophets.142 Chrysostom attempts to counter this claim to sacredness by arguing that the Jews in reality deny, insult, and dishonor the prophets by ignoring their testimonies. Moreover, it is senseless to regard the Torah ark as holy, since it is a poor substitute for the original ark with its tablets of stone.143 Finally, the fascination of Antiochan Christians with Judaism and Jewish practices is evident in the transformation of an Antioch synagogue honoring the Maccabean martyrs into a Christian martyrium. As we have noted above,144 it seems that a synagogue had been built in or near the alleged burial site of these Jewish martyrs (see II Maccabees 67), and their veneration was subsequently adopted by Christians in various regions. Some
137. De Lange, Origen, 36, 86; Simon, Verus Israel, 326. Evidence to substantiate Chrysostoms concern can be found in the Jewish prayer (the Amidah) embedded in a Christian liturgical text as preserved in the Apostolic Constitutions (7, 3338), a work often assigned to fourth-century Syria. 138. Adv. Iud. 2, 2; Catech. 1, 23. 139. Adv. Iud. 8, 4. 140. Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 78. 141. Adv. Iud. 1, 3. 142. Ibid., 1, 5, where, inter alia, the following is said: Therefore stay away from their gatherings and from their synagogues and do not praise the synagogue on account of its books. Rather, hate it and avoid it for that very reason, for they have mangled the saints because they do not believe their words and they accuse them of extreme impiety (Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 96). See also Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 7983. 143. Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 32. 144. See above, Chap. 4.
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time in the fourth century, the Antioch synagogue was taken over by the local church, for by Chrysostoms time the relics therein were already in Christian hands.145 As was the case earlier in Egypt, the later Diaspora synagogue also gave expression to Jewish loyalties toward the Imperial authorities during this period. Two inscriptions from Hungary reect this phenomenon; the one from Intercisa is most revealing:
To the eternal god. For the salvation of our lord, Severus A[lexander], the pious, felicitous emperor an[d of Julia Mamaea] the empress, mother of the emperor, does Cosmius, the chief of the customs station, the autist and archisynagogos of the Jews, gladly fulll his vow.146
The benefactor in this inscription, Cosmius, was a Roman Jewish ocial in charge of the local customs oce. He was also active in the local synagogue, serving as the archisynagogos and a musician. His dedication of a synagogue to the Imperial Severan family is noteworthy. As mentioned above, a similar dedication in honor of the emperor was made in Ostia at about this time; the rst line of this inscription reads pro salute Aug. It is quite possible that the emperor Alexander Severus (222235) is intended in at least one of these inscriptions; he himself was reputedly mocked by an Alexandrian mob as being a Syrian archisynagogos. This slur may be an indication of his pro-Jewish proclivities, although, admittedly, the historical value of this particular source is somewhat dubious.147 Another inscription, from Mursa in Hungary, refers to Septimius Severus family and, together with the evidence from Rome and Qatzion (in the Upper Galilee), attests to the high regard of these Jewish communities for members of this dynasty.148 Synagogues, by their very location, might reect the prominence, or at least the social acceptance, of the local Jewish community. Many were situated in or near the city center, as at Sardis, Apamea, and Plovdiv; sometimes they were located on a main, though not central, street, as at Priene and Stobi. Of course, in the larger cities, where more than one building was to be found, the synagogues locations were of varying prominence. If respectability and acceptance often characterized the synagogue in Late Antiquity,
145. In Sanctos Maccabaeos Homilia 1, 1; Simon, Recherches, 158; Schatkin, Maccabean Martyrs, 97113; Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 88; J. Hahn, Die jdische Gemeinde im sptantiken Antiochia, 5789. 146. Scheiber, Jewish Inscriptions, 29 and comments, 3032. For a discussion of the interpretation of the term spondill, see below, note 185. 147. Scriptores Historiae AugustaeAlexander Severus 28. Another instance of Imperial support, either ocial or unocial, is attested by an inscription from Panticapaeum, dated to 306 c.e., which speaks of an Imperial governor of Theodosia, one Aurelius Valerius Sogus, who built a proseuche to the Most High God (CIRB 64; Levinskaya, Jewish or Gentile Prayer House? 154). 148. For the Mursa inscription, see Scheiber, Jewish Inscriptions, 5355: [For the salvation of the em]perors [Lucius Septimius Severus Pe]rtinax [and Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, the] Augusti [and Iulia Augusta, mother of the cam]ps . . . [Secu]ndus [. . . the Sy]nagogue [of the Jews?] [fallen from] age . . . [from the foun]dations [has restored]. See also Genesis Rabbati 45, 8 (p. 209); Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 12529.
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so, too, did the notion of transition. Earlier, in Hellenistic and early Roman times, Jewish prominence and privilege were at times oset by anti-Jewish sentiments and actions. Conversion was matched by animosity, attraction by hostility. In fact, these were probably not unrelated sentiments. The privileged position of Jews and the distinctiveness of Judaism were sources of admiration for some and of irritation for others. By the fourth century, these polar sentiments had come ever more sharply into focus. In Sardis, Aphrodisias, and Antioch, for example, the attractiveness of Judaism is clearly reected. Yet, at the apparent height of the Antiochan Jewish communitys prestige, and undoubtedly because of it, a local priest like Chrysostom vigorously castigated its members in public sermons and incited the local Christians to conscate the synagogue honoring Maccabean martyrs.149 Indeed, with the triumph of Christianity and the ever increasing power of the church, anti-Jewish sentiment found a sustained advocate. Yet even here a distinction has to be made between the fourth century on the one hand and the fth and sixth on the other.150 We have had occasion to note that a number of synagogues were destroyed or converted into churches during this period.151 But what had been rather sporadic throughout much of the fourth centurye.g., at Antioch, Tipasa (Mauretania), and Dertona (Spain)became much more common from the late fourth century onward.152 At a time when the synagogue at Callinicum, on the Euphrates, was destroyed (in 388, followed by the wellknown confrontation between Ambrose and the emperor Theodosius I), when riots were led by Bishop Cyril of Alexandria (in 414), when synagogues elsewhere were frequently destroyed and replaced by churches and the Jews were expelled, when 540 Jews in the town of Mago in Minorca were forced to convert to Christianity and their synagogue was burnt down and replaced by a church (in 418), and, nally, when Rabbula, the bishop of Edessa (died 435 or 436), consecrated a church to St. Stephen where a synagogue had once stood, a foreboding dimension in Jewish-Christian relations was rapidly unfolding.153
149. On the status and stability of Diaspora communities in the fourth century, see Wilken, Jews and Christian Apologetics, 45171. 150. Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 4955. 151. See above, Chap. 7. 152. Simon, Verus Israel, 224. Of interest in this regard is Ambroses accusation that Jews had done the same thing to Christians in the time of Julian: And to be sure, if I were to talk in terms of the law of peoples [iure gentium] I would say how many basilicas of the Church the Jews burned in the time of Julians rule: two at Damascus, of which one has barely been repaired, but at the expense of the Church, not the Synagogue; the other basilica lies in squalid ruins. Basilicas were burned in Gaza, Ascalon, Berytus, and almost everywhere in that area, and no one sought revenge. A basilica was also burned at Alexandria by pagans and Jews (Millar, Jews of the Graeco-Roman Diaspora, 104). See also Parkes, Conict of Church and Synagogue, 12150. 153. Callinicum: Simon, Verus Israel, 22627. Alexandria: Socrates, Ecclesiastical History 7, 13, 15. Mago: Bradbury, Severus of Minorca 29, 2 (p. 123); Hunt, St. Stephen in Minorca, 10623; see also Miles, Santa Maria Maggiores Fifth-Century Mosaics, 15575. Edessa: J. B. Segal, Edessa, 182. Even in Palestine, there
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Linder has perceptively pointed out the gradual shift in terminology regarding Judaism between the fourth and fth centuries. Throughout most of the fourth century, religio, a neutral term denoting a system of beliefs and practices, was used to refer to Judaism. However, by the fth century, the term had been replaced by superstitio, a pejorative word that referred to something hostile and base.154 This is how Judaism and its institutions were now becoming viewed, at least on the ocial level.
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the predominant language of inscriptions, and not only because most extant remains have been found in the eastern part of the Empire, where Greek continued to dominate. The overwhelming majority of inscriptions in the Jewish catacombs in Rome are in Greek (78%), with Latin accounting for 21%. This range of linguistic distribution in the capital was true of other plebian and immigrant groups as well.158 Nevertheless, in some synagogues in the West (e.g., at Naro, Ostia, Brescia, and Capua), Latin was more visible.159 The titles and oces of leaders and governing bodies also dier from synagogue to synagogue.160 The larger social, cultural, and religious contexts of a Jewish community undoubtedly had a decisive role in shaping not only local artistic and architectural features but also the functions and practices within the synagogue.161 We have already noted the extent to which the Egyptian Jewish proseuche drew on pagan models: its proximity to a grove of trees; its function as a place of asylum; the use of known ocial titles; the dedication of buildings to the ruling family, etc.162 In our examination of Diaspora synagogue sites from Late Antiquity, the local context was likewise very much in evidence, and this dimension will be addressed below.163 However, together with this diversity there was also a great deal of unity and commonality among Diaspora synagogues. The importance of this institution to its members is reected, rst and foremost, in the major expense required to build and maintain such facilities, which was the responsibility of each and every community. Indeed, the synagogue continued to be the Jewish communal building par excellence at this time. Orientation of the synagogues interior toward Jerusalem was universally adhered to in Diaspora synagogues, and the centrality of Jerusalem found expression in the plans of each and every building.164 Gerasa and Dura Europos were oriented to the west (and it may not be coincidental that the representations of Mt. Moriah [the Temple Mount] appear in the middle of the western wall at the latter site), Apamea and Plovdiv to the south, Stobi and Ostia to the southeast, and the others more or less to the east.
158. MacMullen, Unromanized in Rome, 4950. 159. Noy, JIWE, I, nos. 5, 14, 20. 160. Frey, CIJ, I, lxviii .; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 16794; Kant, Jewish Inscriptions, 69298; Williams, Structure of Roman Jewry, 131; and below, Chap. 11. 161. Regarding outside inuences on Jewish burial sites, see Rutgers, Archaeological Evidence, 101 18. 162. Dion, Synagogues et temples, 4575; and above, Chap. 4. 163. See below, Chap. 18. 164. See the plans of Diaspora synagogues in Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 5035; and White, Building Gods House, 6376. It has been much disputed as to whether the Holy Land is referred to in the famous Monteverde epitaph of Regina (venerandi ruris). See, for example, Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 13536; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 24849; van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 112, 126 n. 42; Noy, JIWE, II, no. 103. On other possible ties to the Land of Israel in Diaspora archaeological material, see Noy, Letters Out of Judaea, 10617.
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60. Suggested reconstruction of the Torah ark and aedicula in the Ostia synagogue.
Another feature common to Diaspora synagogues of Late Antiquity was the prominence of the Torah shrine. Almost every extant structure had this permanent xture in its main hall. It might have taken the form of an aedicula (Dura, Sardis, and Ostiag. 60), a niche (Priene, Gerasa, and Apamea), an apse (Elche, Aegina), or a bima (Bova Marina, Stobi). The only questionable instance to date is that of Naro, but even there inscriptions found in an adjacent room east of the main hall seem to indicate that the room served as a storage place for holy objects (instrumenta)which we assume refers to the Torah scrolls.165 Moreover, Diaspora synagogues exhibit an almost identical repertoire of Jewish symbols, the most prominent among them being the menorah. In some synagogues, an elaborately styled menorah is depicted in the center of the nave (Bova Marina, Plovdiv). However, while certainly ubiquitous, Jewish symbols do not seem to have been a dominant feature in Diaspora synagogue decoration, much less so than in Byzantine Palestine. A somewhat more extensive use of Jewish symbols, particularly of the menorah, is evidenced at Diaspora burial sites, especially in the catacombs of Rome.166
165. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 8992. 166. Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 19698; Rutgers, Archaeological Evidence, 107; idem, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 9395; Fine and Rutgers, New Light on Judaism, 123.
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Throughout Late Antiquity, as noted, Diaspora synagogues were regarded as religious institutions with a sacred status, such as that reected in Valentinians decree of ca. 370 dening the synagogue as a religionum loca.167 This status is conrmed not only by inscriptions from Stobi, Philadelphia, Gerasa, and Hyllarima, but also by statements of Chrysostom in the fourth century and of Procopius in the sixth.168 Chrysostom claimed that this sanctity was attributed to the presence of Torah scrolls. However, he concedes that it may also have derived from other sacred forms of worship, such as prayer, or from the synagogues association with the Temple.169 The issue of water, often related to sanctity, was an important concern for many Diaspora synagogues. In matters of prayer, eating, and touching sacred Scriptures, the cleanliness/purity of ones hands was paramount. Extant texts deal mainly with the attitudes toward purity and prescriptions as associated with Second Temple sects and sages of different stripes,170 but there can be little question that the matter was of importance to Jews generally.171 The archaeological evidence from the Diaspora makes this connection eminently clear.172 As has been noted both in Chap. 4 and above, synagogues were often located near water; this was clearly the case in Delos and Ostia, and both Josephus and Acts state this explicitly.173 In addition, many synagogues had some sort of water facility in the courtyards or entranceways, either in the form of a cistern, a basin, a fountain, or several of the above. Such nds have come to light in Sardis, Dura, Ostia, and Priene and are mentioned in inscriptions from Sid and Philadelphia in Asia Minor as well as in a fragment from the Cairo Genizah.174 Interestingly, there have been very few reports of ritual baths found near Diaspora synagogues from Late Antiquity. Whether this is due to the oversight of excavators or to the fact that Diaspora Jews had little use for such facilities is unclear, but it should be noted that relatively few miqvaot have been discovered near contemporaneous Palestinian synagogues.175
167. Cod. Theod. 7, 8, 2 (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, no. 14). 168. Inscriptions: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 10, 28, 32, 78; see also Robert, Inscriptions grecques de Sid, 43 n. 4; Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift in Stobi, 173 n. 95. Chrysostom: Adv. Iud. 1, 3; see Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 7980. Procopius: Buildings 6, 2. 169. Adv. Iud. 1, 5. See Meeks and Wilken, Jews and Christians, 9495; Goodman, Sacred Space, 116; and esp. Fine, who has presented this material most comprehensively in his This Holy Place, 11746, and more succinctly in his From Meeting House to Sacred Realm, 3947. 170. See, for example, Josephus, War 2, 12932 (Essenes); Mark 7:34 and parallels (Pharisees); Letter of Aristeas 3046; B Berakhot 15a (rabbis). 171. See the reference in Mark in the previous note; and E. P. Sanders, Jewish Law, 25871; idem, Judaism, 21440. 172. See A. Runesson, Water and Worship, 11529. 173. Ant. 14, 258; Acts 16:13. On the pollution at times associated with cities and thus the need to distance oneself from them, see Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Pisa 1 (ed. Lauterbach, 34). 174. Lifshitz, Donateurs and fondateurs, nos. 28 and 37; Margoliot, Palestinian Halakhah, 132. 175. Reich, Synagogue and the Miqweh, 29297.
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RELIGIOUS LEADERSHIP
Little is known about the religious leadership in Diaspora synagogues. Only in isolated instances is the word rabbi used with regard to a non-Babylonian Diaspora leader. The term appears in a number of Jewish epitaphs from the fourth to sixth centuries in Cyprus (R. Attikos); Brusciano (R. Abba Maris), Venosa (rabbis), and Salerno (R. Abundanti) in Italy; Tortosa (R. Juda?), Tarragona (R. Latous), and Emerita (R.Samuel, R. Jacob) in Spain; Volubilis in Mauretania (R. Judah); and Cyrene (rabbi).176 We know of no talmudic rabbis who functioned in any capacity in a synagogue of the Roman Diaspora. Rabbinic literature makes no mention of rabbinic gures living there nor of any academies being established there, the sole exception being the school established by R. Mattiah b. eresh in Rome in the early second century.177 However, this institution, mentioned only once in rabbinic sources, is never attested elsewhere. Thus, any religious leadership in the Roman Diaspora was probably locally nurtured and had little or nothing to do with the contemporary rabbinic academies in Palestine and Babylonia.178 Mention of other Diaspora religious leaders (e.g., a priest or didaskalosteacher) occurs only on rare occasions. The example of Samoe from Sardis has already been noted. In an inscription in his honor, located in the center of the synagogues mosaic pavement, the titles priest and sophodidaskalos show that Samoe played a leading role in the religious aairs of that community. A person described as a didaskalos, who might also have been an archisynagogos, is noted in an inscription from Corinth.179 Other titles include mathetes sophon (a disciple of the wise), nomomathes (one learned in the Law), and possibly nomodidaskalos (teacher of the Law)all of which appear in Romeand sophos (a wise person),
176. Millar, Jews of the Graeco-Roman Diaspora, 111; Noy, JIWE, I, nos. 22, 36, 86, 183, 186; Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 5758. See also Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 19294; S. J. D. Cohen, Epigraphical Rabbis, 23. 177. B Sanhedrin 32b; Toa, Matia ben Cheresh, 6980; L. A. Segal, R. Matiah Ben Heresh of Rome, 22141. On the even more enigmatic gure of Todos or Theudas of Rome, see, inter alia, T Betzah 2, 15 (p. 291); B Berakhot 19a; B Pesaim 53ab; Y Pesaim 7, 1, 34a; and Bokser, Todos and Rabbinic Authority, 11730, where it is claimed that the earlier rabbinic traditions relating to Todos indicate that he possessed no real communal authority. 178. S. J. D. Cohen, Epigraphical Rabbis, 1617; van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 9798; Williams, Jews and Godfearers, 297310; cf. Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 7884. Any rabbinic gures known to us from Palestinian literature who ventured into the Roman Diaspora did so for short visits. The case of R. Meir appears to have been most unusual. According to tradition, he ed to Asia Minor late in life and died there; see Y Kilaim 9, 4, 32c; Alon, Jews in Their Land, II, 67073. On the other hand, several sages noted in the Yerushalmi and Bavli are identied as having come from Carthage. See, for example, Y Demai 5, 2, 24c; B Bava Qama 114b. Cf. Simon, Recherches, 3087; Rives, Religion and Authority in Roman Carthage, 21920. 179. G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 21314. On the title didaskalos in a fth- or sixth-century Spanish inscription from Tarragona, see Noy, JIWE, I, no. 186. Rabello (Situation of the Jews in Roman Spain, 17475) suggests a fourth-century date.
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found in Argos.180 In fth-century Minorca, Theodorus was the recognized leader of the entire town and had functioned as a defensor civitatis who enjoyed exemptions from all curial obligations and was the acknowledged patronus. This same Theodorus was also referred to as a legis doctor, which undoubtedly referred to someone knowledgeable in the Torah.181 As the recognized head of the Jewish community and as a prominent ocial in his city, he thus managed to straddle (or should we say, integrate) two worlds.182 In a catacomb inscription from Rome, as well as in the Aphrodisias inscription, mention is made of a psalm singer, and together with the title exarchon, which appears in two catacomb inscriptions, may quite possibly refer to a synagogue functionary.183 A super orans (chief cantor) is noted in a fth- or sixth-century epitaph from Emerita, Spain.184 Finally, although Scheiber renders the Greek term spondill in the inscription from Intercisa as a place-name, the term has also been interpreted as a reference to the Latin spondalia, meaning autist.185
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The Torah shrine is prominent in almost all synagogues of Late Antiquity, appearing in a variety of settings in Palestine as well as the Diasporaa niche (Priene and Eshtemoa); an apse (Elche and Bet Alpha); or an aedicula (Dura and Nabratein).187 Correspondingly, the Torahs centrality to Jewish liturgy is universally recognized; it was read, expounded, and studied throughout the Jewish world, and these architectural remains reinforce this reality. The purity concerns noted above for the Diaspora were likewise widespread among the Jews of Palestine, and water installations of all kinds for this purpose have been found in all parts of the country.188 Moreover, synagogues in coastal cities in both Palestine and the Diaspora were often located near the shore (of Gaza and Caesarea, as well as Delos and Ostia). As noted in this and the previous chapter, a sacred status was common to synagogues in both Palestine and the Diaspora. Synagogues were dened as holy (and on occasion most holy) throughout the Byzantine world. While the Diaspora synagogue was the rst to acquire this status in the pre-70 period, developments in Palestine in the late Roman and Byzantine periods elevated local synagogues to a similar level. The physical dimensions of synagogue buildings in both Palestine and the Diaspora, and the variations within each, will be spelled out in greater detail in the following chapter. Some communities (Sardis, Capernaum) erected monumental structures and others (Khirbet Shema, Priene) far more modest ones. In addition, the location of these buildings might have diered considerably, from the center of a city or village to its periphery. Also common to Diaspora and Palestinian synagogues were the languages used. The primary languages of Palestine were those most in evidence throughout the East, i.e., Greek and Aramaic.189 Hebrew played a distinctly minor role in the epigraphical evidence there, as it did in the Diaspora to an even lesser degree. Greek, of course, reigned supreme in the Diaspora, although Aramaic was also used in the East, as was Latin in the West. Thus, while rabbinic inuence may have been a crucial factor in making Hebrew the primary language of communal prayer in Palestine and Babylonia, it seems that the local vernacular (usually Greek) was generally used for liturgical purposes in the Diaspora.190 This would explain the tradition claiming that, when in Asia Minor, R. Meir could not nd a Megillah (i.e., Scroll of Esther) written in Hebrew and was thus forced to write one himself.191 In addition, there appears to have been just as broad a range of attitudes toward art and gural representation among the communities of Palestine as in the Diaspora. In the
187. Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 16682; L. Levine, Interior of the Ancient Synagogue, 7074. 188. See E. P. Sanders, Jewish Law, 25571; as well as two classic studies: Bchler, Levitical Impurity, 181; and Alon, Jews, Judaism and the Classical World, 146234. See below, Chap. 9. 189. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions. 190. De Lange, Hebrew Language, 11137. 191. T Megillah 2, 5 (p. 349).
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former, their polarity is evident in the more conservative communities, such as En Gedi and Reov on the one hand, and in the more hellenized ones, such as ammat Tiberias and Bet Alpha, on the other. These last examples have been cited particularly with regard to the representation of the zodiac signs and Helios, which are fully represented in the more hellenized settings, but are either completely ignored (Reov) or noted only by name (En Gedi) in the more conservative communities.192 The same range of attitudes toward gural representation is found in the Diaspora, as we can see when comparing the strictly aniconic mosaic oors of the Apamea and Aegina synagogues and the embellished pictorial cycles of the biblical narratives depicted at Dura. Local traditions were of decisive importance with regard to the architectural and artistic styles adopted, and this factor, so clearly evident in Diaspora buildings, was of consequence in Palestine as well. As noted already, each of the countrys various regions left an indelible stamp on the nature and plans of local synagogue buildings, e.g., the Galileanand Golan-types, and well as those of southern Judaea.193 Thus, the picture that emerges within Palestine is not unlike that which we have observed in the Diaspora. Morton Smith noted this phenomenon in passing almost forty years ago: But the dierent parts of the country (i.e., PalestineL.L.) were so dierent, such gulfs of feeling and practice separated Idumea, Judea, Caesarea, and Galilee, that even on this level there was probably no more agreement between them than between any one of them in a similar area in the Diaspora. 194 The use of Jewish symbolism, particularly the menorah, shofar, lulav, ethrog, and Torah shrine, is another common phenomenon of Diaspora and Palestinian synagogues.195 What appears in third-century Dura is likewise evidenced in third-century Bet Shearim and Khirbet Shema. The Jewish symbols of fourth-century Sardis, Stobi, and Ostia are matched at ammat Tiberias, Susiya, and En Gedi. It has been claimed that the use of Jewish symbols in Diaspora synagogues reects the psychology of alienation, a phenomenon specically associated with Jewish minority status in the Diaspora.196 This may be true; however, it can hardly be the sole, or even the main, reason, for we nd that these
192. See Hachlili, Zodiac in Ancient Jewish Art, 6177; eadem, Zodiac in Ancient Synagogal Art, 21958; L. Levine, Interior of the Ancient Synagogue, 6370. 193. Maoz, Art and Architecture of the Synagogues of the Golan, 98115. Regarding southern Judaea, see Amit and Ilan, Synagogue at Maon, 11525; Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 16699. Even within the Galilee, signicant dierences have been noted among the synagogues of the Upper and Lower Galilee. See E. M. Meyers, Galilean Regionalism, 93101. 194. M. Smith, Palestinian Judaism, 6781 (quotation from p. 81). 195. Interestingly, the incense shovel, an integral part of the cluster of religious symbols in Palestine, is almost entirely absent in Diaspora iconography; see Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 34760. 196. H. Krauss, Jewish Art as a Minority Problem, 14771. See also Fine and Zuckerman, Menorah as Symbol, 2431.
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very same symbols were being introduced into Palestine at about the same time, even in areas where the Jews were clearly the majority. Moreover, Diaspora minority status is far from an adequate explanation even for the Diaspora, since pre-70 Diaspora remnants, though meager, carry no representations of Jewish symbols. This is true of Hellenistic and early Roman inscriptions from Egypt, of the Delos synagogue remains, and of rstcentury inscriptions from Cyrene, Asia Minor, and Crimea. If minority status had been the major impetus in the use of such symbolism, one might have expected to nd examples of it even in the pre-70 era. In fact, such symbols were nowhere to be found in Second Temple Palestine. Even the menorah appears in only a few places in Jerusalem and nowhere else in Judaea, and then almost always in connection with the Temple or priests. While the factor of alienation due to minority status may have played a role in stimulating the use of such symbols, we ought to look elsewhere for additional reasons for this phenomenon. The emergence of such symbolism may be related to more general developments of Late Antiquity, such as the increasing degree of sanctity accorded the synagogue (see above), the more widespread use of symbols and especially the transference of Temple symbolism to it and other Jewish frameworks (including the cemetery), and perhaps, most importantly, as a response to the triumphant Christianity of the Byzantine era.197 Interestingly, it is precisely with regard to these and other artistic motifs that an array of dierences emerges between Palestinian and Diaspora synagogues, and in some rather unexpected ways. The intensive use of Jewish symbols, whether on mosaic oors or in stone moldings, is, in fact, much greater in synagogues in Palestine than in the Diaspora. The many Jewish symbols appearing, for example, in a xed pattern on the mosaic oors of Bet Shean, ammat Tiberias, Bet Alpha, Naaran, and Susiya include the Torah shrine, menorah, shofar, ethrog, lulav, and incense shovel.198 Such a cluster of symbols never appears in such a prominent fashion in any preserved Diaspora synagogue, with the exception, perhaps, of Dura Europos. The closest parallel to duplicating this set of symbols in any Diaspora context is found in the Jewish catacombs of Rome, and especially on the fragments of gold glass found there.199 At the same time, Palestinian synagogues show a much greater tendency to feature gural representations, even those with distinctly pagan associations, than do their Diaspora counterparts. Dura Europos, of course, is the classic example of the extensive use of gural art, albeit solely with respect to biblical scenes. Yet no Diaspora synagogue even begins to approximate the blatantly Hellenistic-Roman depictions of the four seasons, the zodiac signs, and particularly Helios found in a half dozen Palestinian synagogues.
197. See L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah, 14853. 198. Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 34765. 199. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 10819.
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Unusual as it may appear, Diaspora synagogues, far from being more syncretistic and hellenized in this respect, were by and large much more conservative. Perhaps the relative security of living in their own land and among a largely Jewish population allowed many Palestinian communities to indulge in artistic expression that their Diaspora brethren found objectionable or threatening.
200. Feldman, Jew and Gentile, 4583, 342415. See also Hengel, Johannine Question, 11617. 201. See, for example, the many laws issued and re-issued for the protection of synagogues at the end of the fourth and in the early part of the fth centuries (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, nos. 21, 25, 40, 4649). To this must be added the famous Novella 146 of Justinian banning the use of the deuterosis in the synagogue; see ibid., no. 66; A. Baumgarten, Justinian and the Jews, 3744.
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their common communal institutionthe synagoguedespite dierences of language, culture, and immediate political and social contexts.202 Modern critical scholars, by their very nature, have spent much time analyzing and dissecting, dierentiating and distinguishing. In our case, this tendency has been augmented by literary sources that are scattered, fragmentary, and often quite tendentious, as well as by archaeological material that is reective only of its immediate environs. But together with parceling and contextualizing, there is a need to balance such analyses by focusing on the unifying and common as well, the shared continuumboth the diachronic dimension and the synchronic continuum from within the contemporary Jewish world. Only by weighing all these factors can one hope to achieve as comprehensive an understanding of ancient Judaism as possible.203
202. On the relation of Diaspora communities to their immediate geographical and social environments, see Gafni, Land, Center and Diaspora, 4157. 203. On this larger question, see below, Chap. 18.
part
II
nine
THE BUILDING
rchaeological data constitute our main source of information regarding the physical features of the synagogue, although literary material has much to contribute as well.1 The many scores of synagogue buildings throughout the Roman-Byzantine world known to date present a wide variety of examples attesting to the location of the building as well as its external and internal appearance. The synagogue building from Late Antiquity, like many public buildings of the time, might include a courtyard, entrances, a main hall with benches, columns, varied decorations, and often a series of ancillary rooms. The unique components that distinguished it as a synagogue would have included all, or part, of the following: Jewish symbols (e.g., the menorah), inscriptions mentioning the term synagogue or proseuche, names of ocials generally associated with this institution, distinctive Jewish personal names (a feature that becomes problematic in a Christian context, when such names overlap), the internal orientation of columns and/or benches toward Jerusalem, and the presence of a bima, niche, or aedicula along the Jerusalem-oriented wall. In the villages of the eastern Galilee and the Golan, with their predominantly Jewish populations, the very presence of such a public building would indicate that it was a synagogue. As noted, synagogues might dier sharply from one another in appearance. Nevertheless, despite all the obvi1. See, for example, the wealth of material amassed in S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 267364.
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ous variations, many common traits remain. It is to the examination of this commonality, together with its many nuances, that we now turn. There is little justication with regard to the synagogue building, or to other areas to be addressed in subsequent chapters, for dierentiating between the Diaspora and Palestine. In both regions, synagogue art and architecture were inuenced by the cultural currents of Late Antiquity, when each community adopted and adapted elements according to its own proclivities. Although some striking dierences between buildings of the Diaspora and Byzantine Palestine do, in fact, exist, there are also some signicant dierences among the Palestinian synagogues themselves as well as among those of the Diaspora (see above, Chap. 8). Given this diversity, and the ultimate autonomy of each community to determine the appearance of its public building, there is little reason to draw sharp geographical distinctions between the Diaspora and Palestine. In this chapter, we shall examine the dierent parts of the synagogue building, beginning with its external features and components and moving inward, to its internal plan and organization.2 Thus, we will rst look at the synagogues location in a community, its plan as a communal complex, its architecture and orientation, adjacent courtyard, water installations, and facade and then proceed to the elements of the buildings interior, beginning with the entrances and culminating with the areas devoted to religious worship. The various types of artistic representation within the building will also be discussed. We will conclude the chapter with some thoughts as to how the synagogues main hall functioned liturgically and also attempt to relate several architectural elements to the liturgical functions of the ancient synagogue.3
LOCATION
Local Jewish communities seem to have had certain common preferences for the location of their synagogue buildings, even though there was a considerable amount of variation. In Palestine, some communities chose to build their synagogues in the center of the village or town in order to aord easy access. This was clearly the case at Chorazim, Susiya, Eshtemoa, Anim, and Merot. However, some synagogues were not centrally located, as at Gamla, Meron, and Arbel, or were placed at a considerable distance from town, as at Gush alav.4 In reworking a tannaitic source, the Bavli makes it clear that
2. See also L. Levine, Interior of the Ancient Synagogue, 3684, as well as the sources marshaled in Z. Safrai, Institution of the Synagogue, 3340; see also Z. Safrai and Ben-Yaakov, Design of the Synagogues, 4170. With respect to southern Judaea, see Amit, Synagogues, 18195. 3. For highly speculative theories whereby the architecture and art of ancient synagogues reect the Jerusalem Temple (both heavenly and earthly), as well as the intricate ideology (Platonic and Philonic) and mathematical calculations behind these plans and designs, see Wilkinson, From Synagogue to Church, 14113. 4. A similar instance is mentioned in B Qiddushin 73b in a Babylonian setting.
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synagogues were known to be built outside the citys ocial boundaries: Come and hear: the following are included in the Sabbath boundary of a town [i.e., a distance ca. one thousand meters beyond the town limits]: a funerary monument of the size of four by four cubits, a bridge or a cemetery that contains a dwelling chamber, a synagogue that has a dwelling house for the azzan, a heathen temple that contains a dwelling house for priests, stables and storehouses in elds that have dwelling chambers, watchmens huts in a eld, and a house by the sea [on an island?]. 5 Two synagogues at Bet Shean are quite dierent in this regard. One (whether Samaritan or Jewish) is located some two hundred meters north of the Byzantine city wall, the other within the city, near its southwestern gate. At Gush alav there was almost certainly a synagogue inside the town, as well as one about three hundred meters to the north, and at Baram two synagogues were found several hundreds of meters apart. Many synagogues were located on an elevated spot, sometimes at the highest point of a town, per the dictum preserved in rabbinic literature.6 Meiron and Kanaf in the Golan are classic examples of this phenomenon, perched as they are on the mountaintop, towering over the residential areas below. A similar instance of this practice can be found at ammat Gader, while at Susiya, Merot, Capernaum, and Chorazim the synagogues physical prominence was enhanced by its placement on an articial podium. Whether this was done because of a rabbinic statement in this regard or because of a widespread Greco-Roman practice intended to give emphasis to public buildings (or both) is indeterminable. Nevertheless, not all synagogues were located at the highest local point, as, for example, at En Neshut in the Golan, and at Arbel and Gush alav in the Galilee. Samaritan synagogues, for their part, appear to have been more consistently located on the outskirts of a town or village. The recently discovered synagogues at Khirbet Samara and el-Khirb were built on the periphery of their respective settlements, and the abovenoted synagogue located north of the Bet Shean city wall also illustrates this tendency, if, in fact, it is Samaritan.7 There is no obvious reason why the Samaritans would do this; purity concerns, political pressures, or their desire for social and religious isolation immediately come to mind, but the phenomenon remains enigmatic. In the Diaspora, as well, synagogues were situated in diverse places within the various towns and cities. On the one hand, the synagogue at Sardis was very centrally located in the city, as were those in Apamea and Philippopolis (Plovdiv). The synagogue at Gerasa was also centrally positioned among the citys public buildings, just west of the Temple of Artemis and on one of the highest spots in the city. On the other hand, the syna-
5. B Eruvin 55b; see also T Eruvin 4, 7 (p. 106). 6. T Megillah 3, 23 (p. 360); see also Tanuma, Buqotai, 4 (p. 55b); B Shabbat 11a. On the placing of pagan shrines on high places, see Bowsher, Architecture and Religion, 63. 7. Magen, Samaritan Synagogues (Eng.), 193227. On the argument regarding the identication of the northern synagogue at Bet Shean, see above, Chap. 7, note 21.
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gogue at Dura Europos was built on the citys periphery, as were those of Delos, Bova Marina, and Ostia. As we have seen, several rst-century literary sources make it quite clear that many Diaspora Jewish communities actually preferred having their synagogues outside the city and near a body of water, such as the proseuche at Philippi in Macedonia.8 A second-century b.c.e. land survey from Arsinoe notes a synagogue by a canal on the fringes of the town.9
8. Acts 16:13. See also above, Chap. 4. 9. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 134. See also the fascinating remark in Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Bo, 1 (p. 2), which describes Moses in Egypt praying outside the city because of the latters abominations and idols. Might this reect the contemporary attitudes of some communities? 10. See the discussion of synagogue functions in Chaps. 5 and 10.
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synagogue at Qatzrin reads: [U]zi made this revua[h]. 11 The use of this term as a noun is rare and means an assembly or a place for reclining; the verb, however, which is far more frequent, means to lie down. 12 Thus, the several rabbinic sources in which the term revuah appears (usually with reference to the academy) seem to refer to a kind of triclinium, where festive meals were held. For example: As was the case in the days of R. Judah b. Pazi. There was a revuah in the academy and they would spread a curtain over four cubits on Friday [lit., from yesterday] and on the morrow [i.e., Shabbat] they would spread it out completely. 13 And: R. Yonah and R. Yosi went to the academy of Bar Ulla, where there was a revuah, and there were beams there. They asked him: Can these be carried [on the Sabbath]? 14 Although not referring specically to a revuah, R. Yoanan takes note of meals being held in synagogues on the New Moon and at other times, and
11. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 110; Urman, Jewish Inscriptions, 53335. 12. Jastrow, Dictionary, 144445; Sokolo, Dictionary, 514; Urman, Public Structures, 46972. 13. Y Shabbat 20, 1, 17c; and literature cited in Chap. 10, note 68. 14. Y Shabbat 4, 2, 7a.
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such activity is attested elsewhere as well.15 A number of Nabatean inscriptions also make reference to a rabata, which presumably has a similar connotation.16 Several Greek inscriptions, one from Caesarea and another from Stobi, refer to a triclinium as part of the synagogue complex,17 while literary references from Josephus to the synagogues of Delos and Sardis note that communal meals were held there.18 Actual kitchen facilities were found only in Ostia, and these consist of an oven and a marbletopped table.19 In a number of synagogues, as at Ostia, Gamla, and Khirbet Shema, ancillary rooms of varying sizes were found with benches along one or more walls. Excavators have regularlyand usually quite arbitrarilylabeled these as places of study, either classrooms for children or academies for adults. The remains of two rooms in the synagogue courtyard at Merot have been identied as both, while another room, o a side wall, was used for depositing communal funds.20 The use of synagogue premises as a hostel is clearly (though meagerly) attested in our sources as well. The Theodotos inscription makes specic mention of such a function, and this is corroborated by literary material as well.21 On occasion, living quarters within the building were provided for functionaries; this is expressly noted in relation to the azzan 22 but may have applied to others as well. The second stage at Dura Europos, which adjoined the original premises to the adjacent House H, signicantly expanded the area of communal activity.23 Such was the case at Stobi as well. It will be recalled that this building was originally the home of a wealthy patron, Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos, who donated part of it to the local community for use as a holy place. Archaeological data seem to indicate that, at one point, the synagogue was enlarged by annexing it to the building next door. The example of Dura Europos is indicative of some Diaspora synagogues in that it was initially built as a private home that was later converted into more monumental public
15. Y Sanhedrin 8, 2, 26ab. See also the more oblique reference to food in the synagogue by R. Jeremiah in Y Pesaim 1, 1, 27b; Meitlis, Signicance of the Revua, 46566; and below, Chap. 10. 16. See, for example, CIS, II/1, no. 160, and other references cited in Urman, Jewish Inscriptions, 53435. On triclinia and cultic meals among the Nabataeans generally, see Glueck, Deities and Dolphins, 16391. 17. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 10 and 66. 18. Josephus, Antiquities 14, 214; 16, 164. 19. Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 24. 20. Z. Ilan, Synagogue and Bet Midrash of Meroth, 27585. The identication of one of these rooms has been aided by an inscription citing Deut. 28:6, which is interpreted as referring to academies and synagogues. On the pronaos mentioned in an inscription from Mantinea (Greece), see Frey, CIJ, I, no. 720; White, Social Origins, 35960. 21. See Chaps. 3, 5, and 10. 22. B Eruvin 55b. 23. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 10.
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premises for an expanded community.24 Even in its early stage, however, this facility was not just a hall for meetings, but boasted a number of ancillary rooms for other activities as well. The synagogues at Priene, Naro, Delos, and Stobi are similar to Dura in this respect. With the possible exception of the Leontis complex in Bet Shean, no extant synagogue from Roman-Byzantine Palestine appears to have been converted from (or added to) a private home; all seem to have been intended as communal buildings from their inception.
ARCHITECTURE
As noted above, communities built their synagogues in many styles and shapes. Some were monumental and imposing (e.g., Sardis), others modest and unassuming (e.g., Dura Europos); some were long and basilical, with the focus on a short wall at one end of the hall (e.g., Meiron), others more compact (the broadhouse type), focusing on the long wall (e.g., Susiya); some faced Jerusalem via their facades and main entrances (the Galilean type), others via their apses, niches, or podiums, with their main entrances at the opposite end of the hall (e.g., Bet Alpha); some were richly ornate (e.g., Capernaum), others completely undecorated (e.g., Meiron). In short, no two synagogues were identical in either shape, size or design, no matter how close they were to one another geographically or chronologically. One has only to compare the synagogues at Naaran and Jericho, Khirbet Shema and Meiron, Reov and Bet Alpha, or Dura Europos and Sardis to understand how striking these dierences could be. This remarkable variety was an integral component of the synagogue scene throughout this period and, as noted, was as true of Palestine as it was of the Diaspora. This last assertion is at odds with the widely accepted theory throughout much of this past century regarding the architectural development of the synagogue, particularly in Roman-Byzantine Palestine. As already mentioned, for generations archaeologists since the publications of Kohl, Watzinger, and Sukenik had accepted as axiomatic a twofold and, later, threefold typological division of buildings based upon chronological considerations.25 The early, or Galilean, synagogue (e.g., Chorazim and Capernaum) was dated to the late second and early third centuries, the transitional, or broadhouse, type (e.g., Eshtemoa and Khirbet Shema) to the late third and fourth centuries, and the later, or basilical, type (e.g., Bet Alpha) to the sixth and seventh centuries in the main. This conception, which had been articulated in several stages, rst by Kohl and Watzinger, then by Sukenik, and nally by Avi-Yonah and Goodenough, was based primarily on historical and artistic considerations. Kohl and Watzinger had argued that the most logical period in which to place the sometimes ornate, monumental Galilean synagogue
24. White, Building Gods House, 60101. 25. Twofold: Sukenik, Ancient Synagogues, 27; May, Synagogues in Palestine, 23137. Threefold: Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, I, 178267; Avi-Yonah, Synagogue Architecture, 6582.
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was around the turn of the third century, at the time of R. Judah I. It was assumed that by that time the Jewish community had recovered from the traumatic events of the previous century and a half and was now in a position to erect such grandiose structures. R. Judahs political, economic, and religious stature, together with his apparently excellent relations with the Roman authorities, presumably facilitated this development. Such a supposition was strengthened, in these scholars opinion, by the artistic similarities between these Galilean synagogues and contemporary pagan public buildings of secondcentury Syria and elsewhere.26 With the discovery of Bet Alpha in 192829 and other synagogues by the early 1930s, Sukenik went a step further and, having noted the striking resemblance between the apsidal synagogue with its mosaic oors and the Byzantine basilical church, posited a second basilical type.27 However, the discovery of a totally different model of the synagogue at Eshtemoa in 1934 led to the suggestion of yet another, transitional, phase (the broadhouse type) that linked the two better-known ones.28 However, this neat compartmentalized reconstructioncoupling typology with chronologyhas been seriously undermined during the last third of the twentieth century by numerous archaeological discoveries.29 At rst, the results of the Franciscan excavations at Capernaum placed this Galilean synagogue in the late fourth and fth centuries and, more recently, Magness has suggested a sixth-century date.30 Soon thereafter, the ndings from excavations at the synagogues of Khirbet Shema and Meironlocated at a straight-line distance of some six hundred meters from each otherdated both of these structures to the latter half of the third century.31 Each of these buildings represents a
26. Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen, 138. Recently, Maoz has attempted to resuscitate the secondthird-century date for Galilean synagogues, although as yet without much success; see his When Were Galilean Synagogues First Constructed? 41626; idem, Categorization of Synagogues, 13442). Nevertheless, the earliest stage of at least one Galilean-type synagogue, Khirbet Sumaqa, has been dated to this period; see Dar, Sumaqa, 73. 27. Sukenik, Ancient Synagogues, 2737; idem, Present State, 723. 28. For the most extensive presentation of this theory, see Goodenough and Avi-Yonah (above, note 25); see also above, Chap. 1. 29. For some of the more recent critiques of an ever-growing list, see E. M. Meyers, Current State of Galilean Synagogue Studies, 12737; Seager, Recent Historiography, 8592; Chiat and Mauck, Using Archeological Sources, 6973; L. Levine, Synagogues, 1422; Groh, Stratigraphic Chronology of the Galilean Synagogue, 5169; Hachlili, Synagogues in the Land of Israel, 99102. 30. Loreda, Late Chronology, 5256; idem, Capernaum, 29294, and bibliography there, p. 296; Magness, Question of the Synagogue, 1838. Even before the Franciscan excavations, several scholars had already noted Byzantine elements in the Capernaum synagogue. Sukenik had suggested a Byzantine date for one of the inscriptions there (Ancient Synagogues, 72), and Avi-Yonah a similar date for a number of capitals from this and other Galilean-type synagogues (Synagogue Architecture, 70). See also the comments of Chen (On the Chronology, 13443) and Sharon (Models for Stratigraphic Analysis, 27783) supporting this later dating and, on the other hand, Tsafrirs critique of the Franciscans conclusions (Synagogues of Capernaum and Meroth, 15161). 31. Khirbet Shema: E. M. Meyers et al., Excavations at Khirbet Shema, 33.; E. M. Meyers, Horvat
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
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62. Lintel from the sixth-century Nevoraya synagogue. Note the wreath and menorah in the center and the inscription across the entire width of the lintel.
dramatically dierent architectural style according to the old theory; Meiron is a quintessentially Galilean-type structure, Khirbet Shema a broadhouse type. Nevertheless, they were both built at the same time and in the same locale. The recently excavated synagogue at Deir Aziz in the Golan, with its broadhouse plan, dates to the Byzantine period, as do almost all other Golan synagogues. The excavation results from Nevoraya proved that the extant building, known for over a century as a Galilean-type structure, was, in fact, the third stage of a synagogue at the site and dates from the sixth century.32 This is explicitly attested by its lintel inscription, which was found in the nineteenth century but deciphered by Avigad only in the mid twentieth (g. 62). The inscription reads as follows: 494 years according to the era [following] the destruction of the Temple [i.e., 564 c.e.L.L.], [this synagogue] was built during the tenure of anina ben Lizar and Luliana bar Yudan. 33 Until the excavations of the late 1970s, no one would accept this epigraphical evidence at face valuenamely, that the synagogue was built in the sixth centurybecause of the regnant chronological assumptions of the time; thus, the term built was interpreted as repaired. Now that archaeological excavations have clearly determined that this last stage was built several centuries after the earlier one, and according to a somewhat different plan, it is clear that much more than a repair was involved. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, several other excavations were conducted at already identied Galilean synagoguesorvat Ammudim, Gush alav, and Chorazim. The nds from the rst two sites point to a mid to late third-century date of construction
Shema, 7173. Meiron: E. M. Meyers et al., Excavations at Ancient Meiron, 16. See the reservations of Loffreda regarding the chronology of the Khirbet Shema synagogue (E. M. Meyers et al., Ancient Synagogue Excavations at Khirbet Shema [Review], 7579), as well as Magness, Response, 8590. Meiron: Foerster, Excavations at Ancient Meron, 26269, esp. 26465; Netzer, Synagogues of Gush Halav and Khirbet Shema, 45354. The same dispute between Magness on the one hand, and Meyers and Strange on the other, holds true with regard to Gush alav as well; see Magness, Question of the Synagogue, 318; E. M. Meyers, Dating of the Gush Halav Synagogue, 4963; Strange, Synagogue Typology and Khirbet Shema, 7178, and Magness, Response, 8589. 32. E. M. Meyers et al., Second Preliminary Report, 35, 43. 33. Avigad, Dated Lintel, 4956; Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, 3133. Similar usage of the word house for synagogue with reference also to the term of oce of an ocial appears at Dura Europos; see Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 263. On similarly dated inscriptions referring to the destruction of the Temple, see the funerary evidence from Zoar at the southern end of the Dead Sea (Naveh, Aramaic Tombstones from Zoar, 47797; S. Stern, New Tombstones from Zoar, 17785).
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at the earliest; those from Chorazim indicate a fourth-century date and the two from Baram, a fourthfth-century date.34 Moreover, as noted above, the results of a number of excavations in the Golan date the construction of synagogues there to the fth and sixth centuries c.e. 35 Finally, the discovery of a Galilean-type structure at Merot in the mid-1980s placed another nail in the con of the older theory, as the earliest stage of this building was clearly and unequivocally set in the late fourth or early fth century.36 Thus, the linear approach equating each type of building to a specic historical period can rightly be put to rest.37 Diversity reigned in synagogue architecture and art, as it did in other dimensions of synagogue life.38 The social implications of this phenomenon are likewise clear. Local tastes and proclivities were the decisive factors in determining what a synagogue looked like and how it functioned. Interestingly, the same diversity appears to have held for Samaritan synagogues as well. In several recently discovered buildings dating from the fourth and fth centuries, the entrances of each diered radically. At el-Khirb, the buildings single portal faced southeast, toward Mt. Gerizim. Some eight kilometers to the west, the synagogue at Khirbet Samara had a single entrance facing west; its eastern wall, later embellished with an apse, faced Mt. Gerizim.39 The controversy surrounding the dating of Palestinian synagogues, especially those of the Galilean type, has pitted very dierent approaches against one another. Three types of considerations have been brought to bear on the issue: the archaeological, artistic, and
34. orvat Ammudim: L. Levine, Excavations at the Synagogue of Horvat Ammudim, 112; idem, Excavations at Horvat ha-Amudim, 7881. Gush alav: E. M. Meyers, Gush alav, 547. Chorazim: Yeivin, Synagogue at Korazim, 30*31*; Baram: Aviam, Ancient Synagogue at Baram, 15569. Mention should also be made of the earliest phase of the orvat Rimmon synagogue, a third-century broadhousetype building (Kloner, Rimmon, orvat, 1284). 35. Maoz, Art and Architecture of the Synagogues of the Golan, 113; idem, in NEAEHL, II, 538 45. See also Ariel, Coins from the Synagogue at En Nashut, 156; and Hachlili, Late Antique Jewish Art from the Golan, 18991. 36. Z. Ilan, Synagogue and Bet Midrash of Meroth, 21, 37; idem, Ancient Synagogues, 41. Cf., however, the reservatons of Tsafrir, Synagogues of Capernaum and Meroth, 15161. 37. Other generally held conceptions relating to the Galilean-type synagogue have likewise been questioned of latefor example, original agstone oors that were replaced by mosaic ones (contra those at orvat Ammudim and Merot), and the absence of xed Torah shrines (see below). It is noteworthy that Avi-Yonah, one of the main proponents of the traditional linear theory, had already voiced reservations in this regard in an article published in 1973, shortly before his death: Ancient Synagogues, 2943. See also Chen, Design of the Ancient Synagogues in Judea, 38; and L. Levine, Synagogues, 142124. 38. The extent of this diversity among Palestinian synagogues is constantly being expanded by new excavations. So, for example, the synagogue of Baram had four rows of columns (and not two or three), and the numerous dierences among the southern Judaean buildings, for all their commonality, is now more fully realized; see Aviam, Ancient Synagogue of Baram, 16566; Amit, Synagogues, 16699, as well as Foerster, Ancient Synagogues, 4042. 39. See above, note 7.
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historical. On the one hand, those who opt for a later dating rely heavily on the archaeological data, dating a building by its latest stratigraphically relevant remains. This has led to a fth- to sixth-century date for a number of Galilean synagogues. On the other hand, for those who base themselves on artistic considerations, a second- or third- (or, at the latest, an early fourth-) century date is far more compelling. The historical component, as invoked by Kohl and Watzinger, has become less of a factor, with the growing awareness that the region did not suer a total economic decline in the third century or later but rather enjoyed an extended period of stability and prosperity throughout most of Late Antiquity.40 Such buildings could well have been constructed anytime from the third to the seventh centuries. Thus scholars are divided over which of the rst two considerations to deem pivotal, the archaeological or the artistic factor; both positions have been defended with passion. Furthermore, an interesting attempt has been made to mediate between these conicting claims. Both Foerster and Aviam, as well as Maoz, have suggested that later Byzantine synagogues used spoils from earlier buildings.41 This theory receives interesting conrmation from third-century rabbinic sources that discuss cases in which residents wished to use stones from old synagogue buildings to build new ones.42 Moreover, such an approach would explain why late archaeological data exist alongside earlier artistic forms and styles. Nevertheless, as appealing as this approach is, much more work remains to be done before this issue can be laid to rest. However, a particular synagogue building was not only an entity unto itself. The proliferation of synagogue nds over the past decades has enabled us to dene regional characteristics ever more clearly. Much has been written about the Galilean type, which usually featured monumental facades, occasionally with ornate stone moldings, one or three entrances facing Jerusalem (Arbel excepted), benches along two or three walls, agstone oors (except at orvat Ammudim), and relatively little gural representation (Capernaum and Chorazim aside) or Jewish symbolism.43 Given the overall similarity in style among many of the Galilean synagogues, it is conceivable that a central authority such as the Patriarch may have had a hand in their construction. We are informed by the available
40. D. Bar, Was There a 3rd-c. Economic Crisis in Palestine? 4354; idem, Settlement and Economy in Eretz-Israel, 2746. 41. Foerster, Has There Indeed Been a Revolution? 52629; Aviam, Ancient Synagogue at Baram, 15569. On the proposed use of spolia in Capernaum, see Maoz, Synagogue at Capernaum: A Radical Solution, 3748. See also Stemberger, Jewish-Christian Contacts, 140 n. 38. 42. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. 43. Even with the striking similarities, the Galilean-type synagogues were not identical. Some were more rectangular than others, with one or three entrances, more and less elaborate designs, and two or three rows of internal columns. The synagogue at Baram, with its entrance portico and possibly four rows of columns (per Aviam), was unique, as was the one at Capernaum with its side atrium, Arbel with its single entrance from the east and niche for a Torah ark, and orvat Ammudim with its mosaic oor. Despite all the variations among these buildings, the impression of overall unity and commonality of plan predominates.
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sources that the Patriarchate was already a powerful institution and continued to function as such until the early fth century. To date, however, we have no hard evidence linking synagogue building in the Galilee with the Patriarch.44 Alternatively, regional traditions, rather than any particular central authority, may provide a more plausible explanation for this trend. The Golan-type synagogue is in many respects similar to the Galilean type; it also boasts a monumental and ornate facade, but the dierences between the buildings are quite striking. Golan synagogues, traces of which have been found at twenty-ve sites, were constructed of local basalt, contained many more Jewish and gural representations, had single entrances (with the exception of e-Dikke) in every conceivable direction, and an interior oriented consistently to the south or west.45 The four synagogues discovered to date in southern Judaea (Eshtemoa, Susiya, Anim, and Maon of Judaea), for all the dierences among them, nevertheless share several noteworthy characteristics: their entrances are oriented to the east, as recommended in Tosefta Megillah (g. 63); and the main hallwith the exception of Maonhas no columns.46 Other synagogues in the country, most of which are in or near major Roman cities (Gadara, Tiberias, Bet Shean, Caesarea, Ashkelon, and Gaza), followed the basilical model that was predominant in Byzantine society. Thus, taking into account all of the above, synagogue art and architecture appear to have reected a delicate balance between the individual community and its larger regional context. On the one hand, each synagogue reected the economic resources, social conguration, and cultural as well as religious proclivities of the local community; on the other, it shared characteristics common to a given region or to other synagogues throughout the Roman world.47 The outward appearance of synagogues throughout the ages has been heavily inuenced by their surrounding cultures. Scholars continue to argue over the origin of the Galilean-type building: Was it an oshoot of Hellenistic places of assembly (the ecclesiasterion or bouleuterion), of the Second Temple synagogue (e.g., Masada), of Roman basilical models, of earlier Herodian buildings like that at Jericho (which themselves were undoubtedly inuenced by foreign models), or of Nabatean temple courtyards from
44. See below, Chap. 12. 45. Maoz, Art and Architecture of the Synagogues of the Golan, 98115; idem, Golan, 53945; Hachlili, Late Antique Jewish Art from the Golan, 183212. On the issue of orientation, see below. 46. On these as well as the synagogues listed below, see the relevant entries in NEAEHL. On the Judaean synagogues in particular, see Amit, Architectural Plans, 12956; idem, Synagogues, 16668; and comments by S. Safrai, In Times of Temple and Mishnah, I, 15458. On entrances to the east, see T Megillah 3, 2223 (p. 360): One should build synagogue entrances only toward the east. . . . One should build them at the highest point of the town, and the discussion of this source in Amit, Synagogues, 17274. 47. See above, Chap. 8.
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63. Plan of the Susiya synagogue. Note the broadhouse-type features, with bima and niche facing north and entrances and courtyard toward the east.
southern Syria? 48 Whatever ones preference in this regard, one basic fact is clear: the art and architecture of the eastern Roman world were a signicant source of inspiration in the construction of the Galilean-type synagogue buildings. All their architectural features point to Hellenistic-Roman models: the triportal entrance, decorated lintels, friezes, windows, gables, acroteria, etc.49 The same holds true with regard to the basilica-type synagogue. As the Byzantine church basilica clearly served as a major source of inuence on the synagogue, a greater emphasis was placed on the buildings interior rather than its exterior; thus, mosaic oors, instead of the facade, became the focus of artistic display. In most of the basilica-type buildings, the synagogue complex included an atrium, narthex, nave and side aisles, with a bima or apse in the wall facing Jerusalem. Whatever may have been the sources of inuence for the dierent types of synagogues, the exterior was no dierent from that of other public buildings that a pedestrian might pass by on a Roman-Byzantine street.50 Archaeological remains of synagogues throughout the Roman world have made this crystal clear. This very point is strikingly conrmed in a rabbinic discussion regarding the halakhic implications of a person who might walk along the street of a town and bow when passing a building that he thought to be a syna48. Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen, 219.; and the articles of Avigad, Foerster, and Netzer, in L. Levine, Ancient Synagogues Revealed, 4251. 49. Cf. the comments by Tsafrir (On the Source of the Architectural Design, 8086), who argues for a uniquely Jewish synthesis of these foreign elements. 50. On Epiphanius engaging though enigmatic reference, that Jews built their synagogues like openair theaters, see his Panarion 80, 1, 5.
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gogue but later discovered to be a pagan temple.51 Of interest for our purposes are neither the details of the particular halakhic issue at hand, i.e., whether in such a situation one is guilty of an intentional transgression of idolatry, nor the fact that such a practice of bowing before a temple was common among pagans as well,52 but rather the architectural reality behind this account. Clearly, the rabbis assumed that one could not easily distinguish between a synagogue and a pagan temple from a buildings exterior. Moreover, in the Diaspora, where some synagogues took the form of reconstructed private homes, these buildings did not stand out from their surroundings. Owing to its unusual state of preservation, the synagogue at Dura Europos is a classic example of how a synagogue might blend in with other buildings on its street.
ORIENTATION
As already noted, synagogues were almost universally oriented toward Jerusalem. This custom, based perhaps on several scriptural references, was widely accepted throughout the Jewish world.53 A word is in order regarding the term orientation. There are three possible ways to dene orientation: (1) the external direction of a building, indicated by its facade, doors, or adjacent atrium, thus following pagan models; (2) the internal design of the main hall, indicated by the placement of columns, benches, bima, and Torah shrine; and (3) the direction of prayer for the Amidah, which with rare exception (see below) requires facing Jerusalem. Often scholars have used the direction of synagogue facades and doors to determine synagogue orientation. However, the positioning of these external architectural elements, which was often a matter of style or topographical necessity, seems to have been a consideration of secondary importance when compared with that of the internal design and usage of the main hall.54 More important is the focus of attention and activity within the hall, which should be the primary and decisive factor in determining orientation. Bearing this in mind, and on the basis of the seating arrangements along the walls, we can conclude that the focus in all synagogues was both the center of the hall and the Jerusalem wall, where a Torah shrine, an apse, or a bima might be found. Only on occasion, as was the case with Galilean buildings, did the exterior of a building reect this internal orientation as well. Thus, it can be assumed that the direction of prayer followed (or perhaps determined) the buildings internal design.
51. B Shabbat 72b; see also B Sanhedrin 61b. 52. Apuleius, Apologia 56, 4; Minucius Felix, Octavius 2, 4. 53. I Kgs. 8:2930; Isa. 56:7; Dan. 6:11. See Landsberger, Sacred Direction, 181203. Cf., however, the somewhat problematic distinctions in this regard put forth by Wilkinson (Orientation, 1636). It is of interest that members of the Jewish-Christian sect, the Elkesaites, are reported by Epiphanius to have faced Jerusalem in prayer as well (Panarion 19, 3, 5). On synagogue orientation, see also Chap. 7. 54. See the comments of Amit, Excavations at Maon and Anim, 2634.
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The practice of orienting a synagogue toward Jerusalem certainly holds true in the Diaspora. The Dura Europos and Gerasa synagogues faced west; Apamea south; Delos, Priene, Aegina, Stobi, Sardis, Ostia, and Naro east or southeast.55 Moreover, this was the norm in Roman Palestine as well. Galilean synagogues faced south, those in the southern part of the country north, and those in the southern Shephelah northeast. Nevertheless, we also know of some interesting deviations. The Golan synagogues, as a group, are quite unusual in this regard. With the exception of the Gamla buildinga pre-70 structureall the Byzantine synagogues in this region faced either south or west. None is oriented to the southwest, i.e., directly toward Jerusalem. Perhaps the southern and western directions adopted by Byzantine architects can be explained as follows: westward would indicate that the primary focus was toward the Holy Land, per the accepted Jewish practice among Diaspora Jews;56 facing south may be explained by the fact that relative to the Golan, Jerusalem lies primarily in that direction. Nevertheless, to have so many synagogue buildings in this small area rather evenly divided between these two alternatives, with no apparent geographical, topographical, or urban-rural explanation, is most puzzling.57 A number of other synagogue buildings likewise exhibit a deviant orientation. The synagogue at orvat Sumaqa on the Carmel range was built along an east-west axis, with an undoubtedly eastward orientation.58 Jerusalem, however, is located southeast of this site, and thus the building should have faced this latter direction, as did the nearby useifa and Bet Shearim synagogues.59 If this part of the coastal region was not considered part of the Holy Land, then facing east may have been considered as similar, perhaps, to the
55. See Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, foldout opposite p. 504; Foerster, Survey of Ancient Diaspora Synagogues, 16471; White, Building Gods House, gs. 916; and above, Chap. 8. 56. T Berakhot 3, 1516 (pp. 1516); SifreDeuteronomy 29 (p. 47); Pesiqta Rabbati 33 (p. 149b); Tanuma, Vayishla, 21 (p. 87b). See also Gafni, Land, Center and Diaspora, 5873. 57. See Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 63113. Another explanation oered for the western or southern orientations of the Golan synagogues is that this region may have served as a destination for populations moving from the Galilee and from Peraea, east of the Jordan River. Those from the Galilee may have then continued to face south and those from the Transjordan area to face west, according to their former customs (we assume the Transjordan custom from the Gerasa structure). As intriguing as this theory may be, it remains speculative, although it is interesting to note that such a phenomenon is evident in modern times. Central and eastern European synagogues face east despite the fact that Jerusalem lies to the south. Presumably, this tradition originated in western Europe yet was maintained in very dierent geographical circumstances. There has been some confusion regarding the Gamla synagogues orientation. The building itself is clearly on a southwest-northeast axis, but its interior focus is in the center of the hall, with four rows of columns and benches on each of its four walls. The particular axis appears to have been chosen for topographical, and not halakhic, considerations. 58. Dar and Mintzer, Synagogue of Horvat Sumaqa, 15765; Dar, Sumaqa, 73. 59. Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 198200, 231, 234; NEAEHL, loc. cit.
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westward orientation of many Golan synagogues.60 This is a possible although, admittedly, inelegant explanation. The Lower Galilean synagogue of Yaa is also oriented on an east-west axis, and its excavators assume that it must have been oriented toward the east. However, no entrances or bima have been recovered, and it may very well be that we have here an example of a broadhouse-type building oriented toward the long southern wall.61 Finally, the Bet Shearim synagogue, with its bima along the northwestern wall, is less of an anomaly. Several Diaspora synagogues have such an arrangement along the wall opposite Jerusalem (Ostia, Naro), and it is very possible that at least part of the liturgical focus was indeed placed in this area even though the hall, as such, was also oriented toward Jerusalem. Whatever the merits of the above explanations in accounting for a number of apparent exceptions regarding orientation, there are two synagogues whose orientation is a total anomaly. The Bet Shean synagogue, just north of the Byzantine city wall, faces northwest. Moreover, it will be remembered from a previous discussion that one of the side rooms contained a Samaritan (i.e., palaeo-Hebraic) inscription.62 Did this orientation, as noted above, have anything to do with the pagan and Christian structures located on Tel Bet Shean to the immediate south? And even were we to assume that this was a Samaritan building, the same problem would exist, for the Samaritans, too, would have wanted to build their synagogue in a southerly direction, toward Mt. Gerizim. This synagogue at Bet Shean has recently been joined by another, at Sepphoris, which is similarly oriented to the northwest. It is sui generis in many ways, from its artistic representations to its inscriptions, although these do not seem in any way related to the buildings unique orientation (g. 64).63 There is no way at present to determine why these two synagogues faced northwest. Indeed, the explanation might not be based upon halakhic considerations, but rather on much more mundane ones: ignorance (however unlikely), indierence, convenience (topographical or otherwise), or the need to accommodate some other factor. If the situation today (particularly in the Diaspora) is a barometer,
60. On the status of the Carmel range in Late Antiquity, see Z. Safrai, Boundaries and Rule, 4245. On the rabbinic tradition (The Baraita of Boundaries) that renders this region undened in its halakhic status as part of Jewish Palestine, see Sussmann, Boundaries, 22729; Neeman, Boundaries, 3951. Millar, who has referred to this area as the southern region of Phoenicia, describes it thusly: this is an indication that we should see this coastal region as a border-zone of Phoeniciaas well, of course, as an area of cities with Greek constitutions, a border-zone (as Tyre and Sidon were also) with the properly Jewish area, and the site of the second Roman colonia [i.e., CaesareaL.L.] of the Near East (Roman Near East, 270). 61. Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 21314. See also Sukenik, Ancient Synagogue at Yaa, 624. 62. On this Bet Shean synagogue, see above, Chap. 7, note 21. 63. See Netzer and Z. Weiss, Zippori, 58; and, for a fuller discussion, Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption, 1213. On the Sepphoris synagogues artistic uniqueness, see many of the articles in L. Levine and Z. Weiss, From Dura to Sepphoris. For discussions of the various rabbinic conceptions as to where prayer should be directed, see Ehrlich, Place of the Shekhina, 31529; Amit, Synagogues, 16872.
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any one of the above, or a combination thereof, may well have played a role in creating this change in orientation. Nevertheless, despite these and the other instances noted above, it should be remembered that the overwhelming majority of synagogues discovered in Roman-Byzantine Palestine reect the accepted practice of orientation toward Jerusalem. There can be no better example of Jewish particularism than the phenomenon of orientation. The facade of sacred buildings in antiquityand thus their orientationwas eastward, toward the rising sun, and this was as true of pagan temples as it was of Christian churches.64 Early Jewish tradition appears to have accommodated this practice with regard to both the desert Tabernacle and the two Jerusalem Temples. However, some time in the Second Temple era such obvious parallels with pagan worship became problematic, and a ceremony was reportedly introduced on the festival of Sukkot to emphasize the dierence between pagan and Jewish practice with respect to orientation: And two priests stood at the Upper Gate, which leads down from the Court of the Israelites to the Court of the Women, and they had two trumpets in their hands. When the cock crowed, they blew three blasts [ . . . .] They continued blowing until they came to the gate leading to the east. When they came to the gate leading to the east, they turned around and faced westward, saying: Our fathers who were at this place had their backs
64. Stillwell, Siting of Classical Greek Temples, 38; Vogel, Sol aequinoctialis, 155211; idem, Orientations, 1.; and the Apostolic Constitutions 2, 57. However, regarding Greek temples, cf. the remarks in Herbert, Orientation of Greek Temples, 31.
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to the Temple of God and they faced eastward, and they worshipped the sun toward the east [Ezek. 8:16]. But we turn our eyes to God! 65 It is probably not coincidental that the custom of orienting the synagogue hall toward Jerusalem became normative at about the same time that prayer was becoming a more dominant component in Jewish communal worship and the synagogue was assuming a more expanded and clearly dened religious character. Archaeologically, we rst encounter this phenomenon in the later third century; in literary sources, this development already appears in tannaitic literature.66 Moreover, the memories of the Temple and Jerusalem, together with the introduction into the synagogue liturgy of expressions of hopes to return and rebuild the Temple and city, were undoubtedly additional forces that helped to forge a distinct and signicant synagogue orientation.
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sence of an atrium, a synagogue may have had a hall leading to a number of rooms (e.g., at Ostia and En Gedi). In addition to serving as a passageway, the atrium was probably also a place for spontaneous gatherings, perhaps before or after some more formal activity inside the building. However, it is also likely that the courtyard served as a meeting place for various synagogue functions. The courtyard at Capernaum was probably used, inter alia, in this capacity. Lieberman has suggested that the comforting of mourners may have taken place in such a setting.68 Moreover, the atrium may have been divided into smaller units with the intention of serving a variety of purposes. Several rooms in the Merot courtyard have been identied, though somewhat speculatively, as a bet midrash and a school.69 Perhaps this was the case in Susiya as well if we locate the banquet at or near the spot in the atrium where the inscription mentioning it was found. Generally speaking, few nds were discovered in such atriums; the most impressive one, however, is the remains of a krater from the atrium of the Sardis synagogue (g. 65). A fountain is mentioned in a fragmentary inscription from Sardis,70 and may well refer to the one found in its atrium. Sundials are noted in connection with several synagogues in Hellenistic Egypt and Delos.71 In at least one synagogue (Arbel), what has been interpreted as a charity box (trough) was found in the courtyard in the northeastern corner of the building.72 Water installations seem to be the element most commonly found in the synagogue atrium. They stood outside the main hall of the synagogue, yet were clearly related to the ritual conducted inside. The most frequently encountered of such installations was the basin.73 On the basis of our literary sources and archaeological data, it would seem that it had two functions. The basin, or ,as it is referred to in the Talmud, was used for the washing of hands and feet and was placed in the middle of the courtyard (atrium), just outside the main entrance to the synagogue, or in the hall, or narthex, leading from the street into the synagogue sanctuary.74 Installations of this type were found at Gaza
prayer leader has to relieve himself in the middle of his recitation. One option was to clear the congregation from the synagogue hall into the atrium while he took care of his needs; another was for the leader to leave the hall and, upon his return, resume his prayer recitation from the beginning. See J. Mann, Sefer Hamaasim, 7. 68. Lieberman, TK, I, 49. 69. Z. Ilan, Synagogue and Bet Midrash of Meroth, 274. 70. Frey, CIJ, II, no. 751. 71. Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 115, and comments on pp. 19699. 72. Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 11617. Similar arrangements are known from Elche and from medieval synagogues as well; see Assis, Synagogues throughout the Ages, 167. 73. At several sites (e.g., Priene and Bet Shearim), such installations were found inside the main hall of the synagogue; see below. 74. Brand, Ceramics, 9697. Washing ones feet before prayer was already a well-known Jewish custom in Late Antiquity as has been argued by Bar Ilan (Washing Feet, 16269).
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
65. Sardis atrium, looking west toward the synagogue building. Note the basin in the center of the atrium and the eagle table in the main hall behind it.
and En Gedi as well as Dura Europos, Ostia, Asia Minor (Sardis, Philadelphia in Lydia, Priene), Delos, and Gerasa.75 The Yerushalmi speaks of a synagogue in Bet Shean that had a in its courtyard and was used by those coming to pray.76 The Theodotos inscription explicitly mentions water installations as part of the synagogue complex, although neither their specic function nor their location are ever made clear.77 In an inscription from Sid in Pamphylia, Asia Minor, it is reported that in the days of one Leontius, son of Jacob, a leader in the local synagogue, a fountain () was constructed in the synagogue courtyard.78 In a number of locales, water installa75. Gaza: Ovadiah, Synagogue at Gaza, 130. En Gedi: Barag et al., Synagogue at En-Gedi, 117. Dura Europos: Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 13 and 28; Ostia: Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 22; Runesson, Water and Worship, 12526. Sardis: Mitten, Sardis Excavations, 4647; Seager, Building History, 425; Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 169; and S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 31314. Philadelphia: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, 31. Priene: Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 77; III, no. 879. Delos: see above, Chap. 4. Gerasa: Crowfoot and Hamilton, Discovery, 216. See also Goitein, Mediterranean Society, II, 15455. A fragmentary inscription found in Tiberias has been restored by Ben-Dov (Fragmentary Synagogue Inscriptions, 80) to read this basin ([ ] or [ .) [On water installations in the synagogue, see Runesson, op. cit., 11529. 76. Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a. 77. See above, Chap. 3. 78. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 37.
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tions were not man-made, but rather natural cavities in the ground from which water was drawn.79 Water installations are known from the pagan and Christian world as well. Plutarch and Seneca attest to the fact that basins were standard temple equipment.80 Upon entering the temenos, or sacred area, of a shrine or sanctuary, devotees would wash their hands and pray facing the deity. Eusebius, in describing the magnicent church in Tyre built by Constantine, notes that at the entrance to the sacred precincts in the east there were fountains to cleanse those entering.81 Several explanations for this practice of washing have been oered.82 One reason given by the author of the Letter to Aristeas is the need for purication at the time of prayer.83 A Genizah fragment posits another reason; washing symbolizes the need to act in awe and holiness while in the synagogue, as was once the practice when entering the precincts of the Jerusalem Temple: It is for this reason that our ancestors installed in all synagogue courtyards oering basins of fresh water for sanctifying the hands and feet. 84 A very dierent type of water installation, although found only on occasion close to synagogues, was the stepped cistern. Whether such a cistern is to be labeled a miqveh (ritual bath) is an open question. Three synagogues from pre-70 Judaea, i.e., Masada, Herodium, and Gamla, had such cisterns nearby.85 For other pre-70 Judaean synagogues we have limited evidence, and it would be unwarranted to generalize what we know from these three sites and apply it to others.86 Given the highly charged religious and nationalistic fervor of the inhabitants in these three locales, and the fact that these buildings were
79. As, for example, in the synagogues of Bet Alpha, Bet Shean, Susiya, Eshtemoa, Naaran, and Khirbet Sumaqa; see NEAEHL, loc. cit. 80. Plutarch, Sulla 32; Seneca, Ep. 41, 1. 81. Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 10, 4, 40. 82. See above, Chap. 4. 83. Letter to Aristeas 3046. See also Alon, Studies, 2013; E. P. Sanders, Jewish Law, 231, 25871. 84. Margoliot, Palestinian Halakhah, 132. On entering a synagogue barefoot, see ibid., 131. There are also references in early Muslim literature to the Jewish practice of not wearing shoes when praying, and that Muslims were not to follow suit; see Kister, Do not assimilate yourselves, 33549. 85. The buildings at Masada and Herodium did not become synagogues until the time of the rst Jewish revolt, and the ritual baths there also date to that time. The northern miqveh at Masada is located in building VII, about 40 meters east of the synagogue; that of Herodium was adjacent to the synagogue hall. The Gamla synagogue was constructed several generations earlier, at the turn of the rst century c.e., but its miqveh was either original to the building or added at the outbreak of the revolt. See Foerster, Synagogues at Masada and Herodium, 26; Maoz, Synagogue of Gamla and Typology of Second-Temple Synagogues, 36; idem, Architecture of Gamla, 154; Syon and Yavor, Gamla, 11. See also Reich, Synagogue and the Miqweh, 29092. 86. It is impossible to determine with any degree of certitude what the water installations mentioned in the Theodotos inscription refer to. Their use as miqvaot is certainly possible. The fact that no stepped cistern has been found to date near the synagogue structure at Qiryat Sefer (above, Chap. 3) indicates that not all Judaean synagogues had miqvaot.
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contemporaneous with the Temple and its purity requirements, the cisterns there may very well have served as miqvaot.87 As noted, the custom of performing ablutions before engaging in sacred Temple worship was well known in the ancient world. This practice is clearly documented in the Second Temple era; Jubilees, the Testament of Levi, and the Mishnah all describe the preparations of the high priest for the Yom Kippur ceremonies, alluding to the necessary ablutions preceding a sacred moment, often the sacricial act itself.88 Following the destruction of the Second Temple, and throughout Late Antiquity, the number of miqvaot in Jewish communities declined precipitously. Moreover, even when a stepped cistern existed and may have been used for purity purposes, communities were not always concerned about placing them near synagogues.89 It would seem that the destruction of the Temple diminished the importance of ritual purication among the Jews, and there was thus less need for miqvaot. Furthermore, there is nothing in Jewish law that indicates the obligation to use ritual baths with respect to the synagogue,90 and, indeed, remains of such stepped cisterns have not been found in most synagogue complexes of Late Antiquity. Exceptions to this would include Merot, Maon (Nirim), Susiya, and Maon ( Judaea).91 Whatever the purpose and frequency of these stepped cisterns, some communities may have used other already available installations for purication. One practice, well documented for the rst century by Josephus and the New Testament, and a century later by Tertullian, was to build the synagogue near a body of water, perhaps for this purpose.92 Such was the case at Caesarea, Gaza, Delos, and Ostia.93 Other communities may have taken advantage of the local bathhouse.94
87. E. P. Sanders, Jewish Law, 21427. 88. Jubilees 21:16; Testament of Levi 9:4; M Yoma 3, 3; 1QS 3:45; 5:13; CD 10, 1013; Josephus, War 2, 129; see Leaney, Rule of Qumran, 14142, 19195. 89. Reich, Synagogue and the Miqweh, 29297. 90. According to the Samaritan Chronicle, Baba Rabba built a ritual bath and synagogue at the foot of Mt. Gerizim. However, this ritual bath was undoubtedly built because of the holy mountain and not because of the presence of a synagogue; with regard to the other seven synagogues attributed to him, no mention is made of ritual baths. See J. M. Cohen, Samaritan Chronicle, 7172. 91. Reich, Synagogue and the Miqweh, 29295; idem, Reich, Miqvaot ( Jewish Ritual Immersion Baths), 32540; Z. Ilan and Damati, Meroth, 45; Amit and Ilan, Synagogue at Maon, 12122; Amit, Synagogues, 18486. 92. Josephus, Antiquities 14, 25759; Acts 16:13; Philo, Flaccus 12223; Tertullian, Ad Nationes 13. See also Lauterbach, Tashlik, 234. 93. Caesarea: L. Levine, Roman Caesarea, 42. Gaza: Ovadiah, Synagogue at Gaza, 129. Delos: Bruneau, Les Isralites de Dlos, 465. Ostia: Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 2021. On the sea as a place of ritual immersion in rabbinic literature, see M Miqvaot 5, 4; T Miqvaot 6, 3 (p. 658); on the river as such a place, see T Makhshirin 2, 12 (p. 674); T Miqvaot 4, 5 (p. 656). In general, see Runesson, Water and Worship, 11529. 94. M Miqvaot 6, 10; T Miqvaot 5, 78 (p. 657); 6, 34 (p. 658). There is a question as to whether the
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66. Stages of the Maon (Judaea) synagogue: stage 1 (left) and stage 2 (right).
ENTRANCES
Architecturally speaking, one of the most important components of the ancient synagogue building was its entranceway. With rare exceptions (e.g., Arbel), Galileantype synagogues had their main entrances on the southern side of the building, in the direction of Jerusalem. In the basilica-type synagogue, the entrances were almost always in the opposite direction from the apse or bima, which faced Jerusalem. In the Golan, as noted, entrances had no consistent pattern and could face in any direction. The main entrances of the four synagogues discovered to date in southern Judaea (Susiya, Eshtemoa, Maon, and Anim) all faced east (g. 66).95 As noted above, in this region at least, the rabbinic dictum to place synagogue entrances in this direction appears to have been the norm: They should place the entrances to synagogues only in the east, for thus we have found with the Tabernacle, that they oriented [its entrances] toward the east, as it is written: Those encamped before the Tabernacle [were located] eastward, before the Tent of Meeting eastward [Num. 3:38]. 96 Archaeological discoveries attest to the enormous investment often made in decorating the entrances to the building. In many synagogues, especially those in the Galilee and Golan, the entrance facade was the buildings most ornate feature. This was true both of smaller buildings having only one entrance and of larger ones (especially in the Galilee) boasting three. The synagogue facade not only served as an entranceway but also demarcated the boundary between the outside world and the buildings interior, where degrees of holiness prevailed. According to the Babylonian sage R. isda, before a person begins to pray he must enter two doors into the sanctuary, which may be understood literally as going
phrase gentile miqvaot outside of Eretz Israel refers to bathhouses; see M Miqvaot 8, 1; T Miqvaot 6, 1 (p. 657). 95. Amit, Architectural Plans, 13655. 96. T Megillah 3, 22 (p. 360); see also Lieberman, TK, V, 1200. For a discussion of this dictum, see Amit, Synagogues, 17280.
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through two openings or, according to a later gloss, the distance of two openings ( 79.) In this vein, a later midrash makes the following statement: What is the meaning of the phrase, to guard my doors [Prov. 8:34]? The Holy One, Blessed be He, said: If you come to pray within a synagogue, do not stand by the outer portal to pray there, but rather you should enter one door and then the other. To guard my door is not written here but my doors, i.e., two doors. And why is that? The Holy One, Blessed be He, counts your steps and rewards you accordingly. 98 It is thus not coincidental that the ubiquitous basilica-type synagogue of the Byzantine period usually had two separate entrances leading into the main sanctuary, one that led from the atrium into the narthex (the entrance corridor) and a second from the narthex into the main sanctuary. If this is indeed the sayings original Sitz im Leben, the above midrash seems to have encouraged one to enter not just the rst door, into the narthex only, but to continue through the second portal into the prayer hall itself. The synagogue gate is mentioned in a number of rabbinic traditions and probably refers to its entrance. An innkeeper, sent to nd someone last seen in the synagogue, came to its gate and called out the persons name through the entire night.99 Another tradition locates the well of Miriam in the Sea of Galilee (or the Sea of Tiberias), and according to R. Yoanan b. Maria, the well was located directly in front of the middle gate of the Saringit (or Sarongaia, Sarongin) synagogue.100 Synagogue portals were often chosen as the place for displaying dedicatory inscriptions. Several inscriptions regarding the making of the portal or parts thereof, such as the lintel, were found at Dabbura, Alma, Tiberias, Kokhav Hayarden, and Rama.101 Because of its prominence, the portal was also chosen as the place for more general dedicatory inscriptions regarding the entire building or for those concerning the congregation or the artisan. Thus, we read the following on the lintel of the synagogue at Baram: May peace be in this place and all the places of Israel. Yosi the Levite, son of Levi, made this lintel. May blessing come through his deeds. Shalom (g. 67).102 Yosi the Levite was apparently the artisan who executed the work and perhaps donated his time and money as well. His
97. B Berakhot 8a. 98. Deuteronomy Rabbah 7, 2; see also Deuteronomy Rabbah, Ki Tavo, 2 (p. 108). 99. Genesis Rabbah 92, 6 (pp. 114445) and parallels. 100. Leviticus Rabbah 22, 4 (p. 511). See also Y Ketubot 12, 3, 35b; Y Kilaim 9, 4, 32c; Ecclesiastes Rabbah 5, 7. This town was presumably located southwest of the Kinneret; see S. Klein, Sefer Hayishuv, I, 113; idem, Galilee, 113; Press, Topographical-Historical Encyclopaedia, III, 675; Avi-Yonah, Gazetteer, 96; Reeg, Ortsnamen, 46364. 101. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 4, 11, 15, 21, 22, 42. Regarding a possible reference in an inscription from orvat Ammudim, see the comments in ibid., no. 42; and Httenmeister, Aramaic Inscription, 10912. The inscription from Kokhav Hayarden reads as follows: [May . . . be remembered for good] he who donated this lintel from . . . of God (lit., the Compassionate One) and from his property. Amen. Amen. Selah (Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 42). 102. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 1.
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profession as an artisan is conrmed by an inscription from nearby Alma: May peace be in this place and all places of His people, Israel. Amen. Selah. I, Yosi b. Levi the Levite, the artisan who made [this lintel]. 103
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as well.106 If Byzantine churches are any example, then congregations may have sat in all parts of the assembly hall, in the nave as well as in the aisleson stone benches, wooden benches, and mats.107 Moreover, it should be noted that the practice among Greeks and Romans was to pray standing, often with arms outstretched toward the deity.108 Rabbinic literature mentions, en passant, two dierent scenarios for congregational seating. In one source, the Bavli (quoting a tannaitic tradition) probably refers to benches along the walls of the building when it speaks of an av bet din who died; members altered their pattern of seating when gathering in the synagogue: Those [accustomed to sitting] in the north [now] sit in the south; those [accustomed to sitting] in the south [now] sit in the north. 109 In the Tosefta, however, the following is recorded: How did the elders sit? Facing the congregation and with their backs to the holy [i.e., Jerusalem and the Temple] . . . the azzan of the synagogue faces the holy and the entire congregation faces the
106. B Bava Batra 8b; see Sokolo, Dictionary, 962. 107. Mathews, Early Churches, 11737. Rabbinic literature also reports on benches in pagan sanctuaries; see T Avodah Zarah 6, 3 (p. 469). 108. Alderink and Martin, Prayer in Greco-Roman Religions, 125. 109. B Moed Qatan 22b. On the problem of reconciling these sources with the archaeological remains, see below, Chap. 13.
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holy. 110 From this last tradition, it would seem that the congregation sat in rows facing the front of the synagogue, while the elders sat facing the congregation.111 Not only does this source appear to contradict the former tannaitic tradition preserved in the Bavli, but both these sources stand in sharp contrast to the extant archaeological remains. Benches have been found primarily on the western and eastern walls of synagogues, almost never on the north and south only. Moreover, only on rare occasions has an excavation revealed benches along the Jerusalem wall. Benches or chairs may have been reserved on occasion for important personages. Rabbinic sources take note of seventy-one ornate chairs in an Alexandrian synagogue, as well as of a bench in the synagogue at Maon (a suburb of Tiberias), possibly reserved for charity donors from outside the city.112 In other synagogues, as just noted, the Tosefta describes the elders of the congregation sitting on benches arranged against the wall facing Jerusalem, while a later source describes them as sitting, facing that wall along with the rest of the congregation.113 Archaeological evidence from several sites points to the arrangement of special seats for synagogue leaders. In the Diaspora, the apse at the western end of the building at Sardis was clearly reserved for prominent members of the congregation, and such may also have been the case at Naro.114 An inscription on the side of the nave in the synagogue at Elche mentions elders and presbyters and seems to indicate the existence of such a bench for these leaders.115 The last stages of the ammat Tiberias building (seventh to eighth centuries) also exhibit a bench in its apse that undoubtedly was reserved for congregational leaders.116
110. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360). Those facing the holy could be those sitting along the side walls. However, this is not the simplest or most likely explanation of the description. 111. See Maimonides, Laws of Prayer 11, 4. 112. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273); and above, Chap. 4, on the question of this traditions historicity; Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a, and commentaries, loc. cit. 113. Dierences in Customs, no. 36 (p. 156). This apparent contradiction may possibly be resolved by interpreting the latter source as a reference to the actual moment of recitation of the Amidah, when the congregation turned toward Jerusalem, as performed centuries later under Muslim inuence (see Wieder, Islamic Inuences, 68). The problem remains, however, as to why the elders are described as facing the congregation and not changing their direction to face the holy, like everyone else. 114. Sardis: Seager, Building History, 42627; Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 169. Naro: Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 91 and 93. On the Cathedra of Moses, see below. 115. See above, Chap. 8. 116. Even though preliminary publications dealing with this synagogue do not indicate the existence of a bench, visits to the site clearly show a course of stones protruding along the entire back wall of the apseprobably a bench for the elders of the congregation. See now Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, II, 41. For a rather speculative suggestion that this stratum of the building was a church, see Milson, Stratum IB Building, 4556.
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In some synagogues, special seats were reserved for prominent individuals. In Phocaea (Asia Minor), a woman named Tation, having erected the assembly hall [] and the enclosure of the open courtyard [] with her own funds, gave them as a gift to the Jews. This generous benefaction merited her a prominent seat () in the synagogue hall.117 Synagogue leaders or important visitors also may have had occasion to sit on the Cathedra of Moses, examples of which may have been discovered at a number of sites in Palestine and the Diaspora (see below). Columns to support the roof are an essential element in most public buildings and were found in almost all excavations of ancient synagogues. Donors to the synagogue often inscribed their names and the names of others on these columns as dedicatory inscriptions, as they were readily visible to all, thus aording maximum exposure and recognition. Such columns were found, inter alia, at Dabbura in the Golan and at Gush alav, Capernaum, and Khirbet Yitzaqia (south of Bet Shearim).118 One Shimai (?), son of Ocsantis, from Bet Guvrin purchased a column in honor of the congregation [911 .] Columns in synagogues are often noted in literary sources as a place for quiet meditation or for support when feeling ill.120 In describing someone at the time of prayer, the Yerushalmi states: Although He far transcends His world, [yet when] someone enters a synagogue and stands behind a column and prays in silence, the Holy One, Blessed be He, hears his prayer. 121 When R. Judah b. Pazi felt weak in the synagogue, he held his head and stood behind a column, whereas in similar circumstances, R. Elazar is reported to have simply left the premises.122 In another instance, R. Shmuel bar R. Yitzaq noticed that the meturgeman leaned against a column and did not stand next to the Torah reader, which he regarded as mandatory.123 Besides their essentially functional role, some synagogue columns might have had a purely ornamental purpose. The four monumental columns in the entranceway to the Ostia sanctuary were clearly intended as a kind of propylaeum.124 Moreover, an inscription from Sid in Asia Minor notes two main columns, together with two menorot, that perhaps anked the Torah shrine.125 It is possible, though unveriable, that these columns
117. Frey, CIJ, II, no. 738; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 13; Treblico, Jewish Communities, 11011. 118. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 7, 12, 18, 40. 119. Ibid., no. 71. On a similar expression, honor of the house of Caesar, in rabbinic literature, see L. Levine, R. Abbahu, 6669. 120. Lieberman, TK, IV, 890. On columns in synagogues of the later geonic era, see Goitein, Womens Gallery, 314. 121. Y Berakhot 9, 1, 13a. 122. Y Berakhot 5, 2, 9b. 123. Y Megillah 4, 1, 74d. Columns are mentioned also in connection with the academy in Tiberias at the end of the third century. It is noted that R. Ami and R. Asi preferred to pray between the columns of the academy instead of in one of the thirteen synagogues in the city. See B Berakhot 8a, 30b as well as 27b, which speaks of R. Ishmael b. R. Yose, who would pray next to a column every Friday night. 124. See above, Chap. 8. 125. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 36.
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represented the Joachim and Boaz columns that once graced the entrance to Solomons Temple (I Kgs. 7:21).126
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69. Chancel screen (soreg) from a synagogue in Ashdod, with a wreath enclosing a menorah, shofar, and lulav, in addition to an inscription: May . . . be remembered for good and for a blessing. Shalom.
synagogue context as part and parcel of the Christian basilica model. In the course of time, as Fine has suggested, it may have acquired the signicance of dividing the more holy area of the synagogue hall (i.e., where the Torah scrolls were placed) from the less sacred space.134 The chancel screen itself was composed of small columns (at times with capitals) between which marble plaques or slabs were placed. Sometimes these plaques bore inscriptions or symbols, with the menorah being the most frequent one displayed. Other motifs represented include the Torah shrine, clusters of grapes, pomegranates, geometric gures, and oral patterns, as well as birds, eagles, and lions (g. 69). Remains of chancel screens have been found at sites around the Sea of Galilee (ammat Tiberias, ammat Gader), near Bet Shean (Maoz ayyim, Reov), in southern Palestine (En Gedi, Susiya), and on the coastal plain (Caesarea, Ashdod, Ashkelon, and Gaza).135 In a synagogue at Syracuse, a chancel screen appears to have been built around the bima itself,136 while at Sardis, a railing separated the benches intended for synagogue leaders from the rest of the congregation. The existence of balconies is indicated archaeologically by the remains of dierentsized columns, as a second story would require smaller columns than those that stood on the ground oor. In several places, stairs were discovered, also indicating a second story.137 The function of such a second story is unclear. Some have opined that it served as a womens gallery, but there is no evidence to support this claim (see below, Chap. 14). An upper chamber of the synagogue is mentioned on occasion in rabbinic sources as a
134. S. Fine, Chancel Screens in Late Antique Palestinian Synagogues, 6785. 135. See NEAEHL; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 18791. 136. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 102. 137. As at Capernaum, Chorazim, and Susiya. See Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 19495.
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place where festive meals were held, but it also might have served as the residence of a azzan, a place for study, or possibly for litigation.138
138. See below, Chap. 10. 139. Since the term bima is somewhat ambiguous, I have deliberately distinguished between it and the raised podium at the front of the synagogue. At times they may have been identical, at times not. The bima is the place where the Torah was read, the targum translated, and probably the sermon delivered. It may refer to a table standing in the nave or, alternatively, a raised platform on which a lectern was placed. If a large platform had been positioned along the Jerusalem wall, it is safe to assume that this was where the Torah shrine was located and the Torah read. 140. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273); and above, Chap. 4. See the practice as codied by Maimonides (Laws of Prayer 11, 3). 141. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 102. 142. Goitein, Anbol-Bima, 16267; idem, Mediterranean Society, II, 14647. Rashi and others have interpreted the term kursaya ( )in B Megillah 26b to mean bima; however, the word has generally been taken to refer to a special type of seat, a cathedra; see Sokolo, Dictionary, 254; Z. Safrai, Dukhan, Aron and Teva, 7778. 143. Frey, CIJ, II, no. 781; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 36; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 35152; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 8183. There is some unclarity with regard to the terms ambon and simma, especially the latter. See comments in the above references and the bibliographies cited therein. 144. Tralles: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 30. Sardis: Seager, Building History, 426; Seager
344 t h e s y n a g o g u e a s a n i n s t i t u t i o n
We have already had occasion to note that a wooden bima was placed in a public square or in the courtyard of Jerusalems Second Temple for the purpose of reading the Torah.145 Ezra read the Torah to the Jerusalem populace from a wooden platform ( 641,) and the high priest stood on a bima ( ) and read from the Torah during the Haqhel ceremony on Sukkot once every seven years.147 In a parallel tradition, perhaps reecting a dierent time frame, the Mishnah tells of King Agrippa I, who read a portion of the Torah (subsequently referred to as ) while standing on a wooden platform in the Temple courtyard. 148 Even considering these precedents in Jewish tradition, it is nevertheless most likely that the placement of a bima or table in the center of a Byzantine synagogue was inuenced primarily by the church practice of having an ambo in the nave from which, inter alia, Scriptures were read. In fact, these two dimensionsearlier Jewish and contemporary church practicesneed not be considered mutually exclusive. Both factors may have been at play, with current Christian practice being given a measure of legitimacy and acceptance by consciously imitating an earlier Jewish practice. Thus, it is also possible that the church may have adopted this arrangement on the basis of earlier Temple practice, only to have it reappropriated later by the Jews.149 However, in contrast to the above-noted archaeological data from the Diaspora of Late Antiquity, there is virtually no archaeological evidence for a bima in the center of synagogues from Roman-Byzantine Palestine. Other than possible hints from Nevoraya and Kefar anania (i.e., depressions in the oor), there is nothing to corroborate that such an installation was located in the middle of the nave area.150 Likewise, in synagogues having fully, or almost fully, preserved mosaic oors, there is no indication or trace of a bima in the center. This is as true of Palestinian synagogues such as ammat Tiberias, Bet Alpha, Jericho, and Naaran as it is of the Diaspora synagogue at Naro or Aegina.
and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 16970. Dura Europos: Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 17, 25556. 145. See above, Chap. 2. 146. Neh. 8:4. 147. Antiquities 4, 20911. 148. M Sotah 7, 8. In describing the annual reading of the Torah on Yom Kippur by the high priest, no mention is made of a platform, although one was probably erected for such an occasion (M Yoma 7, 1). 149. Goitein, Mediterranean Society, II, 147. See also Z. Safrai, Dukhan, Aron and Teva, 7477. See also the suggestive, though late, tradition according to which sermons were delivered from a bima in (the middle of?) the academy hall: It is said that David the Righteous would set up a bima in the bet midrash and would sit and expound to Israel good tidings and comfort, the laws of Passover on Passover, the laws of Shavuot on Shavuot, and the laws of Sukkot on Sukkot (Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 35:1 [p. 723]). 150. According to the excavators of Nevoraya and Kefar anania, the depressions found in the oor of the main hall once t the legs of a wooden bima; see E. M. Meyers et al., Second Preliminary Report, 40; Z. Ilan, Kefar Hananya, 255. See also Seager, Recent Historiography, 86. At Bet Alpha, remains of a small platform, perhaps a bima, were found against two southern columns on the eastern side of the nave; see NEAEHL, loc. cit.
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The absence of a centrally located bima may not be surprising, given the fact that many synagogue oors were covered with lavishly decorated mosaic oors containing gural and symbolic representations as well as dedicatory inscriptions. It is dicult to imagine that a community or individual would have invested time and money in creating oors with such art and inscriptions if they were to be covered, even partially, with a bima. Synagogues that did not have such rich decorations may well have had a bima in the center, but no indications of this have been discovered. Of course, if we assume that such bimot were made of wood (per the practice in the Second Temple and in the rst-century Alexandrian basilica), then the absence of any remains would be most understandable. It may also be that in many cases, particularly in smaller towns and villages, such a bima was a portable wooden table or lectern, as has been the Yemenite tradition for centuries.151 Nevertheless, in the absence of positive evidence, it seems rather unlikely that a bima stood in the center of many, if not most, synagogue halls in Byzantine Palestine.152 Despite earlier precedents, and in contrast to widespread church practice at the time, the bima might also have been located elsewhere in the main hall of the synagogue. At some sites, for example, it was set in the back of the nave, against the wall opposite the Jerusalem orientation; such appears to have been the case at Ostia, Bet Shearim, and Naro, and such an arrangement became quite normative in some medieval synagogue traditions.153 At Bet Alpha, a platform of sorts appears to have been located o to the side of the nave, adjacent to one of the columns; however, its apparently small size probably precluded its functioning as a bima. The raised platform was a focal point in almost every synagogue. While such a podium may have been very modestly located adjacent to the entranceway, it also could have been a much more impressive installation occupying a more central position along the Jerusalem wall. In places where there was only a small platform, as at Gush alav, En Gedi, Merot, or Chorazim (per the suggested reconstruction), there would not have been enough room for the Torah-reading ceremony to have taken place thereon, and thus the ceremony must have been held elsewhere, possibly toward the middle of the nave. In synagogues with a large podium, the platform was not only used to hold the Torah shrine but was also spacious enough for conducting the Torah-reading ceremony. A major dierence between early synagogues (rst century c.e.) and those of Late Antiquity (latter third to eighth centuries c.e.) was precisely the existence of such a xed
151. Muchawsky-Schnapper, Jews of Yemen, 11213. 152. Z. Safrai, Dukhan, Aron and Teva, 7477. 153. Ostia: Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 24; Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 498; Goitein, Mediterranean Society, II, 14447. Bet Shearim: NEAEHL, loc. cit. Naro: Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 91. See also the testimony of Maimonides (Laws of Prayer 11, 3); and comments of Blidstein (Prayer, 21011). That such an arrangement may have been true in eleventh-century France, in Rashis time, may be reected in his comment on the talmudic discussion of the bima in the Alexandrian synagogue (B Sukkah 51b).
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70. Plan of the Eshtemoa synagogue. Note niches and bima to the north, and entrances and narthex to the east.
podium along the Jerusalem-oriented wall, which appeared regularly in the later buildings but was entirely absent from Second Temple ones. Podiums built later on were found in the northern part of the country at Bet Alpha, Reov, and Maoz ayyim.154 The excavators of Merot thought that one of the two small platforms found along the southern wall of the synagogue was the base of a Torah shrine, while the second was probably for reading the Torah.155 It is also possible that the additional podium was for a large menorah, additional scrolls, or the prayer leader.156 Finally, Yeivin has suggested that a second (alleged) podium found at Chorazim was for a Seat of Moses.157 Remains of an assortment of stone platforms were found in a number of synagogues in southern Judaea. At Eshtemoa, a stone foundation built adjacent to the northern wall may well have served as such a podium (g. 70).158 A similar raised structure was placed before the niche on the northern wall of the synagogue at En Gedi,159 and two such installations were found in front of the northern wall of the synagogue at Susiya. Although their excavators refer to them as bimot, their precise function is not clear.160 Moreover, other elements, such as the niche, apse, and bima, may have been added after the podium was built. With the introduction of the podium along the Jerusalem wall, a place was allocated for the Torah scrolls, which had now become permanently ensconced within the hall.161 This was indeed an additional step toward transforming the synagogue building into a
154. For these sites, see NEAEHL, loc. cit. 155. Z. Ilan, Synagogue and Bet Midrash of Meroth, 25859. 156. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 170; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 41; E. M. Meyers, Torah Shrine, 318, 325. 157. Yeivin, Synagogue of Chorazin, 274; idem, NEAEHL, I, 304; idem, Synagogue at Korazim, 54. 158. Yeivin, Synagogue at Eshtemoa, 44. 159. Barag et al., Second Season of Excavations at En Gedi, 53. 160. Yeivin, Khirbet Susiya, 9397. At Anim, the podium occupied one-fourth of the main hall; see Amit, Synagogues, 12021. 161. Scholars have at times related this architectural development with the rabbinic phrase to go down before the Torah chest ( ,) often somewhat speculatively. See, for example, Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 25, 378; I. Levy, Synagogue, 54; and, for a more comprehensive discussion, Z. Weiss, Location of Shelia Tzibbur, 821. See also the remarks in Hacohen and Rozenson, Comments, 17277. The connection between these sources and the archaeological nds requires further clarication.
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holy place.162 In fact, several synagogues seem to have altered their original plans in order to replace entrances in walls facing Jerusalem with podiums and Torah shrines. Such changes appeared at ammat Tiberias, En Gedi, Merot, and possibly Bet Shearim.163 There can be no doubt that such shrines were reective of a major development in the religious status of the synagogues main hall. Nevertheless, it should be pointed out that not all synagogues had podiums. At a number of archaeological sites no traces have been found (e.g., orvat Ammudim), and in some cases excavators have been hard pressed to identify such remains (e.g., Meiron, Chorazim).164 It may well be that in these places the community continued the ancient custom of introducing the Torah scroll into the main hall for its public recitation and then removing it upon completion of the reading (see below).
CATHEDRA OF MOSES
One of the few furnishings found in synagogue excavations in both Palestine and the Diaspora is a seat reserved for an honored personage.165 This seat has been identied in several literary sources as the Cathedra or Seat of Moses. The earliest literary source in this regard is found in the New Testament:
Then Jesus said to the crowds and to his disciples: The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses seat; therefore, do whatever they teach you and follow it; but do not do as they do, for they do not practice what they teach. . . . They love to have the place of honor at banquets and the best seats in the synagogues. 166
The fth- or sixth-century midrash, Pesiqta de-Rav Kahana, in describing Solomons throne, notes a comment by R. Aa that this throne resembled the Cathedra of Moses.167 Other literary references to this seat are more oblique. The term cathedra alone appears in rabbinic literature in a number of dierent contexts. It will be recalled that the seventy-one magnicent seats in the Alexandrian synagogue described by the Tosefta are referred to as cathedrae but are not associated with Moses.168 One midrash speaks of a seat
162. On the prominence of the Torah ark in the Byzantine period inviting criticism and disparagement on the part of a number of church fathers (and later on, the Karaites), see Lieberman, Midreshei Teiman, 2425; idem, Sheqiin, 9. 163. At Merot, the podiums were in place from the beginning; just the entrances were changed from the south to the north over the course of time. 164. Meiron: E. M. Meyers et al., Excavations at Ancient Meiron, 1213. Chorazim: Yeivin, Reconstruction of the Southern Interior Wall, 26876; NEAEHL, I, 304; and esp. idem, Synagugue at Korazim, 27*. 165. For the most recent coverage of this evidence, see the detailed study in Rahmani, Stone Synagogue Chairs, 192214. 166. Matt. 23:16. Cf., however, comments in S. J. D. Cohen, Were Pharisees and Rabbis, 1035. 167. PRK 1, 7 (p. 12). 168. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273).
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reserved for a visiting sage that may well have been the synagogue cathedra: R. Huna in the name of R. Yose said: Everywhere that this Jerusalemite goes they oer him a cathedra and they seat him on it so that they can listen to his wisdom. 169 A later midrash may refer to this seat when describing Moses, who wrapped himself in his talit and sat as would an elder while God stood. In reacting to such surprising behavior (i.e., that Moses sat while God stood), the midrash responds that it was a special chair that God made for Moses so that he could sit yet appear to be standing: R. Drusai said: He made him a chair as the chair of the lawyers [ ]who, when appearing before government ocials, seem as if they are standing but in reality are sitting. Also, here we are talking of sitting that looks like standing. Thus it is written: And I will sit on the mountain. 170 In rabbinic society, a sage would sit in front of his students while teaching, but a Cathedra of Moses is never mentioned in this context. With regard to R. Aqiva and R. Judah, we read of a special bench or seat ( )on which they sat when teaching,171 and, in another relatively late midrash, we learn of a stone on which R. Eliezer b. Hyrcanus of Yavneh used to sit in his academy. After R. Eliezers death, R. Joshua came and kissed the stone, saying: This stone is like Mt. Sinai, and he who sat on it was like the Ark of the Holy Covenant. 172 Might the association ascribed to R. Joshua, namely, that the chair is like Mt. Sinai and he who occupied it is like the Ark of the Covenant, explain why a similar type of seat had come to be associated with Moses in the synagogue context? 173 Let us turn now to the archaeological evidence. Special seats identied as the Seat of Moses have been found in a number of ancient synagogues. The earliest example comes from rst-centuries c.e. Delos (g. 71), and another from third-century c.e. Dura Europos.174 Three cathedrae, all dating to the fourth or fth century c.e., have been found
169. Lamentations Rabbah 1, 1 (p. 23b). On sitting while teaching, see, for example, PRK 18, 5 (p. 297) R. Joshua b. Levi; Tanuma, Lech Lecha, 10 (p. 34b)Yoanan b. Zakkai. 170. Exodus Rabbah 43, 4; see Sperber, Dictionary, 22. 171. B Yevamot 98a. See also the tradition about Yoanan b. Zakkai, who sat on a stone under an olive tree while R. Elazar b. Arakh was teaching about the Chariot (T agigah 2, 1 [p. 380]; B agigah 14b); cf., however, the account in Y agigah 2, 1, 77a, which omits the reference to a stone. This type of mystical experience is likened to the Sinaitic revelation, as suggested in Urbach, Traditions about Merkavah Mysticism, 211; Gruenwald, Yannais Piyyutim, 26066; and D. J. Halperin, Faces of the Chariot, 1137. 172. Song of Songs Rabbah 1, 3, 1. See also Luke 4:2022, where it is reported that Jesus, after concluding his haftarah reading while standing, proceeded to sit and deliver a sermon. Another tradition regarding R. Eliezers preaching in an academy setting while sitting in a chair (interestingly, with a azzan standing next to him) and wrapped in a talit is preserved in Tanuma, Lech lecha, 10 (p. 35a). 173. The stone on which Moses sat in the battle against the Amalekites (Exod. 17:12) was regarded with awe by later generations (B Berakhot 54a). See also the statements of the second-century b.c.e. tragedian Ezekiel on Moses and the heavenly throne (Holladay, Fragments, II, 36367, and his comments, 43851). See also van der Horst, Moses Throne Vision, 2129; and, generally, Bar Ilan, Stone, Seat, and Cathedra, 1523. 174. Delos: Sukenik, Cathedra of Moses, 14547; idem, Ancient Synagogues, 5761; Foerster, Survey
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71. Elaborate chair from the Delos synagogue, possibly a Cathedra of Moses.
in Roman-Byzantine Palestine: at ammat Tiberias (in the Slousch excavations of the early 1920s), Chorazim, and En Gedi.175 The actual term Cathedra of Moses, however, has never been found on any archaeological artifact; in a fragmentary inscription from Dalton in the Upper Galilee the single word cathedra appears.176 Despite the limited number of archaeological nds, the types of cathedrae and their appearance vary greatly. Sometimes the seat stood as an independent unit, as at Chorazim, ammat Tiberias, and Delos, and at times it was an integral part of the network of benches in a synagogue, as at Dura and En Gedi. The simplest examples have been found at these latter sites, the most elaborate at Delos, and intermediate types at ammat Tiberias and Chorazim. Only at Chorazim does the cathedra bear a dedicatory inscription, to one R. Judan bar Ishmael who made the stoa (columns?) and stairs of the synagogue.177 Perhaps R. Judan himself once sat on this seat, as Samuel, a presbyter and archon of the Dura Europos synagogue, undoubtedly did.178 Several cathedrae were found against the wall facing Jerusalemthe western wall by the Torah shrine at Dura Europos and the northern wall to the right of the Torah shrine at En Gedi. The cathedrae at Chorazim and ammat Tiberias were not found in situ, although both were discovered at the southern end of the building and, more specically, near the southeastern corner, close to the wall facing Jerusalem. The cathedra at Delos was located against its western wall, facing the eastern entrance and in the direction of
of Ancient Diaspora Synagogues, 166. On the dating of the visible Delos remains to the rst centuries c.e., see Trmper, Oldest Original Synagogue, 51398. Goodenough ( Jewish Symbols, II, 85) has suggested a further reference to a cathedra in an inscription from Hellenistic Egypt, where, he posits, the practice rst arose. For the inscription in question, see Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 28. Dura Europos: Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 260. Sukenik (Synagogue of Dura, 46), however, interprets the top step in the Dura synagogue as a bima for reading the Torah. 175. NEAEHL, loc. cit.; Sukenik, Cathedra of Moses, 14751. 176. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 107; Httenmeister and Reeg, Die Antiken Synagogen, I, 97. 177. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 17. 178. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 17.
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the Holy Land. Thus, at least with the Dura and En Gedi examples, elders sat facing the congregation with their backs to the holy per the Toseftan tradition.179 Many explanations have been put forth in an attempt to explain the precise purpose of this cathedra, with each explanation nding its support in a particular source or a specic archaeological nd. Roth and, more recently, Rahmani interpret the cathedra as the place where the Torah scroll was placed after it was read.180 Most scholars, however, view the cathedra as the seat for a leader in the congregation, although opinions dier as to the precise role of that leader: judge, archisynagogue, or spiritual-religious gure such as a Pharisee, sage, preacher, or some honored guest.181 In this context, it is worth noting the Samaritan account which speaks of a synagogue built by Baba Rabba at the foot of Mt. Gerizim; seven stones reputedly from the ancient Tabernacle were placed there, and on them sat seven members of the council.182 Special cathedra-like seats are known from pagan and Christian contexts as well, and the Jews thus appear to have adopted this practice from their surroundings, using it for any or all of the above-noted purposes. Pagan priests often sat on cathedrae in their temples, and bishops and other clergy sat on special seats in their churches.183 However, to the best of our knowledge and in contrast with the pagan priest and the Christian bishop, we know of no one particular person who might have regularly occupied such a seat in a synagogue setting, where leadership was relatively decentralized. Thus, it is likely that in many congregations more than one person occupied the cathedra, depending upon the particular activity then taking place: prayers, a sermon, a teaching session, court proceedings, visits by special guests, etc. Mention should also be made of another kind of chair ( )noted in a synagogue context. According to the Bavli, the fourth-century Babylonian sage Rava notes that a Torah scroll was regularly placed on such a chair, which was sometimes covered with a cloth.184 In Ravas opinion, the chair thus acquired a degree of holiness that prohibited it
179. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360). 180. Roth, Chair of Moses, 100111; Rahmani, Stone Synagogue Chairs, 20313. Support for this theory can be found in B Megillah 26b, where a kursaya (chair) is noted as a place in which a Torah scroll might be placed; see above, note 142. 181. Bacher, Sige de Mose, 299.; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 36162; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 386; Sukenik, Cathedra of Moses, 14551; Bar Ilan, Stone, Seat, and Cathedra, 2223; Mack, Seat of Moses, 312. Seats once occupied by famous sages were regarded with veneration, as, for example, in the case of R. Aqiva (B Yevamot 98a). A cathedra in a synagogue might have been used to seat someone who took ill or for an elderly or inrm person; see J. Mann, Sefer Hamaasim, 7. 182. J. M. Cohen, Samaritan Chronicle, 71. 183. Pagans: Richter, Furniture, 3132, 1012. See also TDNT, VI, 87071; and T Avodah Zarah 6, 3 (p. 469). Christians: Didascalia Apostolorum 12 (p. 119); Mango, Art of the Byzantine Empire, 2425; and bibliography in Rahmani, Stone Synagogue Chairs, 207 nn. 7879. 184. B Megillah 26b. See B. Narkiss, Heikhal, Bimah and Teivah, 45.
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from being sold for other purposes. Given this sanctity, it is unlikely that this chair also functioned as a cathedra.185 How widespread the use of the Cathedra of Moses was in the synagogue setting remains unknown.186 Since cathedrae have not been found in most ancient synagogues excavated to date, it is wholly gratuitous to suppose that they were common in the repertoire of synagogue furniture.187 As far as can be known, the Cathedra of Moses per se is never accorded any particular theological or ideological signicance, nor does it appear to have had any particular religious or ritual function, unless we assume that R. Joshuas lamentation for R. Eliezer and his seat was widely known and that the context was a synagogue. Barring this, it is more probable that the cathedra was merely a piece of furniture on which an important person sat, as was the case elsewhere in the ancient world. It found its way into a number of synagogues and became thoroughly judaized through its association with Moses.
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andas in Roman glass representationstwo doors opening outward; it was presumably made of wood.190 The chest contained shelves that held the Torah scrolls. The upper part of the chests exterior was often decorated with a gable, in the center of which was a conch. A parokhet, often depicted as drawn to the side to reveal the ark, may have regularly covered the front of the chest. The tevah was reportedly brought outside for the public fast-day services,191 and over the course of time, it was introduced into the regular worship setting in an orderly fashion: When they set the tevah down [in the synagogue hall], it faces the people and its back is to the holy. 192 Although Lieberman explains this last tradition in connection with a public fast-day ceremony, most commentators have rightfully argued for a regular Sabbath or holiday synagogue context.193 In Second Temple synagogue buildings, it would seem that the Torah chest was mobile and was introduced into the main hall only when it was to be read. There is no other way to explain the absence of a podium, niche, or apse in Second Temple synagogues. Even as late as the third and fourth centuries, several sources indicate that the Torah scroll was not always a permanent xture in the synagogue hall, but was brought in only for reading and then subsequently removed: When R. Dimi [early fourth century] came, he said: On one occasion they forgot and did not bring a Torah scroll the day before. The next day they spread a sheet over the columns and brought a Torah scroll and read from it. And who permitted them to spread it out in the rst place? Everyone admits that one should not make a temporary tent on Shabbat! 194 Rather [thus we should formulate the tradition], they found sheets already spread over the columns and they brought a Torah scroll and read from it. 195 The reality behind this source, especially the comment about the spreading of sheets over columns, is unclear. The reference may be to the columns of the synagogue court190. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 99144; and below, note 202. Gold glass, found primarily in the catacombs of Rome, provides the best illustrative material regarding the Torah chest (ibid., II, 108 20; Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 8185; see also Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 292304). In Ravenna as well, doors of a chest are at times depicted open, and boxes containing the gospels are displayed, as in the mausoleum of Galla Placidia; see Deichmann, Frhchristliche Bauten, pls. 56. Two recently excavated Samaritan synagogues, at el-Khirbe and Khirbet Samara, feature Torah chests with their curtains tied to one side, thus revealing the Torah chest in its entirety; a somewhat similar phenomenon appears in Byzantine mosaics from Jordan and in the church of St. Apollonia at Ravenna; see Amit, Curtain, 57175; Piccirillo, Mosaics of Jordan, pls. 335, 370, 505; Deichmann, Frhchristliche Bauten, 10710. 191. M Taanit 2, 1. 192. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360). 193. Lieberman, TK, V, 11991200. Cf., however, Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 394; S. Safrai, Synagogue, 941. See also Maimonides, Laws of Prayer 11, 3. 194. Such an activity is prohibited on the Sabbath. Who, then, permitted it? See B Shabbat 125b. 195. B Eruvin 86b; and Diqduqei Soferim, loc. cit.
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yard, and R. Dimi may have been reporting a Palestinian custom of bringing the Torah scroll into the synagogue on the Sabbath. A similar situation may be alluded to in several statements attributed to the third-century R. Joshua b. Levi: The prayer leader [ ] is not permitted to remove [the mantels] from the Torah chest in public, owing to the honor due the congregation. The congregation may not leave until the Torah scroll is removed and put in its proper place. 196 Finally, such a practice may even be reected in a source from Late Antiquity: Those in the east [i.e., Babylonia] honor the Torah when it is introduced [into the synagogue]; those in Palestine [honor it] when it is introduced and taken out. 197 Several scholars have speculated on the nature of the ceremony accompanying the introduction of the Torah ark into the main hall of the ancient synagogue. Ginzberg, for example, has opined that the song of the kine (I Sam. 6:12) appearing in the Bavli and midrashim was recited;198 Gutmann has suggested that the middle panel at Dura Europos, illustrating the Wilderness Tabernacle and its fate when captured by the Philistines, was a visual parallel to the procession of introducing the Torah ark into the synagogue hall.199 A ceremonywhatever it may have involvedappears to have continued into the Byzantine period, especially at sites in the Galilee and Golan that apparently had no permanent place for the Torah chest, as at orvat Ammudim, useifa, Meiron, e-Dikke, Umm elQanatir, orvat Kanaf, Assalieh, and Nevoraya (the last stage). The elaborate ceremony recorded in Tractate Soferim undoubtedly has its roots in Late Antiquity.200 Nevertheless, these types of synagogues are in a distinct minority when we consider the sum total of buildings in which a podium was found. The Torah chest was a permanent xture at dozens of sites in Israel and throughout the Diaspora 201 and was to be found in one of the following contexts or in a combination thereof.202
196. B Sotah 39b. Interestingly, Rashi seems to explain this passage in light of the medieval reality, where there was a permanent ark. The Torah is brought in and placed in the ark and only later removed from it. As long as the congregation is in the synagogue, when it was customary to bring the Torah scroll into the synagogue from another house [or room], where it was kept, they [the congregation] would spread beautiful garments around the Torah chest and place it [the Torah] in its midst [in the chest or ark]; when they were about to leave they would take the Torah scroll back to the house [or room] where it was kept; they would not remove the garments from the Torah chest in the presence of the congregation. 197. Dierences in Customs, no. 49 (pp. 17374). 198. B Avodah Zarah 24b; Genesis Rabbah 54:4 (pp. 58182); Seder Eliyahu Rabbah 12 (p. 58); and Ginzberg, Beitrge zur Lexikographie, 8689. Cf., however, Kraeling (Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 105), who connects this song with the return of the ark from the land of the Philistines, or Scholem ( Jewish Gnosticism, 2425), who associates it with mystical circles. 199. Gutmann, Programmatic Painting, 148. 200. Tractate Soferim 14, 49 (pp. 25663). 201. See E. M. Meyers, Torah Shrine, 30338; Z. Weiss, Location of Shelia Tzibbur, 1619. 202. On an inscription referring to the Torah shrine at Sardis as a , a place for safeguarding the Torah, see Kroll, Greek Inscriptions, no. 63. Regarding the various contexts in which it
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Podium. As noted above, the Torah chest was often placed on a stone platform usually located along the wall facing Jerusalem. This podium was usually found in the center of the wall, as at orvat Rimon, ammat Tiberias, Reov, Qatzrin, Anim, and elsewhere, or on one side of the main entrance, as at Gush alav and En Neshut.203 We have seen that two such small podiums were built on both sides of the main entrance at Nevoraya (the rst and second stages), Sardis, and Merot.204 Aedicula. Made of stone, such an installation was either placed on a podium as a freestanding element or built into the wall with steps leading up to it. It was often decorated with small columns, a gable, and other architectural elements. Fragments of aediculae are rare and have been found in Palestine only at Nevoraya and perhaps Khirbet Shema, although the Torah shrine depicted on the ammat Tiberias mosaic oor may represent an aedicula par excellence (g. 72). The Sardis synagogue seems to have had aediculae on either side of its main entrance, and Ostia boasted a magnicent aedicula on one side of the synagogue halls main entrance.205 The second type of aediculabuilt into the wall
was found, see Hachlili, Niche and Ark, 4353; eadem, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 166 94. On the Diaspora, see Kraabel, Social Systems, 82. 203. See NEAEHL, loc. cit. 204. Sardis: Seager, Building History, 426; Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 169. Merot: Z. Ilan and Damati, Meroth, 49. On Nevoraya, see E. M. Meyers et al., Second Preliminary Report, 4043. On the reconstruction of two such shrines anking the entrance to the Chorazim synagogue, see Yeivin, Synagogue at Korazim, 26*27*, 63. Hachlili exaggerates the number of such attested nds in Galilean synagogues (Synagogues in the Land of Israel, 1056). 205. Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 23; Runesson, Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 5056; Fine and
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is well represented at Dura Europos, where this installation was located toward the middle of the western wall facing Jerusalem (g. 73).206 In this type, columns and an arch surrounded the niche, aording the Torah shrine an elegant appearance. Niche. The Torah chest might also have been placed within a much simpler setting, i.e., in a semicircular or rectangular recess cut into the wall facing Jerusalem. Such niches have been discovered at Apamea, Bova Marina, and Priene in the Diaspora, as well as at Arbel, En Gedi (its later stage), and possibly also Eshtemoa and Susiya in Palestine.207 Apse. In the course of the Byzantine period, under the inuence of the Christian basilica, the apse was introduced into synagogues throughout Palestine, though less so in the Galilee and Golan.208 It was semicircular in shape and located at one end of the main sanctuary; it is not clear how the apse was decorated, if at all. Synagogues with apses were discovered at ammat Gader, ammat Tiberias (the last stage), Bet Shean (the northern synagogue), Bet Alpha, Maoz ayyim, Jericho, Maon (Nirim), and possibly Gaza.209 In the Diaspora, apses were found at Elche and Aegina.210 In addition to being a place for setDella Pergola, Synagogue of Ostia, 5057; see also Kraabel, Diaspora Synagogue, 498500; and above, Chap. 8. 206. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 16; see also Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 16787. 207. Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 17980; eadem, Niche and Ark, 4353. 208. See Foerster, Dating Synagogues with a Basilical Plan, 8794. 209. Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 18082; Ovadiah, Mutual Inuences, 163 66. 210. An apse is also mentioned in a Greek inscription from Khan-Khalde, less than twenty kilometers
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ting the Torah chest, this architectural feature served other functions. In several places, a cavity was made in the oor for storage; sometimes coins were found there, possibly indicating the location of a community chest (e.g., Bet Alpha).211 All of the facilities intended to house the Torah scrolls were considered to some degree holy in their own right per M Megillah 3, 1. The Ostia inscription of Mindius Faustus, noting the contribution of an ark for the sacred Law, indicates this association, as does the Greek inscription for the Torah shrine in Sardis, which calls it a nomophylakion, a place for safeguarding the Law.212
south of Beirut: May they be remembered for good and for a great abundance of blessings, Yose Abamaris and his son Benjamin, who, for their salvation, donated and made the apse and laid the mosaic for the apse and the upper [part] in the year 686 [605606 c.e.]. See Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, no. 31. 211. Sukenik, Ancient Synagogue of Beth Alpha, 13. 212. See Noy, JIWE, I, no. 13; Kroll, Greek Inscriptions, no. 63. 213. Exod. 27:20, 30:78; Lev. 24:3. Thus, the word should be translated as regularly. Similar use of this word is found with regard to the daily sacrice ( ) in the Temple, which likewise must be understood as a sacrice made on a regular basis. However, Josephus, allegedly following Hecataeus, reports that there was a perpetually burning light in the Second Temple (Against Apion 1, 199). 214. I Sam. 3:3. 215. Sifra 1, 5 (ed. Finkelstein, p. 5); SifreNumbers 1 (pp. 12). 216. Midrash on Song of Songs 2, 16 (ed. Dunesky, p. 62).
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74. Stone fragment from the Nevoraya aedicula depicting the remains of two lions on a gable with a conch below.
on lights, sending away the impure, and the daily oering. As for the section on lights, whether in the Temple, the synagogues, or the academies, Jews [lit., Israel] are obligated [to use them ritually] since synagogues and academies are similar to the Temple, as it is written: I will be for you a lesser sanctuary [Ezek. 11:16]. 217 Thus, such a light (or lights) might serve as a reminder of the Temples lights, although undoubtedly it soon acquired other meanings as well, such as symbolizing Gods continued presence in the synagogue and His ongoing relationship with Israel.218 The presence of this light in synagogues (and its association with the Temple and sanctity) became a controversial issue later on between the Karaites and the Rabbanites.219 Two pieces of archaeological evidence that can be associated with the ner tamidboth sui generiscome from Nevoraya in the Upper Galilee. Just to the south of the synagogue, several fragments of a black ceramic vessel were found bearing the design of a Torah ark and what seems to be a suspended lamp. In the same excavations, the pediment of what has been identied as a Torah shrine was found buried in the bima of phase III. It depicts two lions anking a gable, beneath which is a shell with a hole through which a chain holding an eternal light probably passed (g. 74).220 Artistic depictions of what is most probably the ner tamid were also found at Bet Shearim, Bet Alpha, and Bet Shean.221
217. Ginzberg, Geniza Studies, I, 77. See also Midrash Hagadol, Leviticus 6:2 (p. 141); and Z. Safrai, From Synagogue to Little Temple, 2324. See also below, note 227. 218. B Shabbat 22b. See also the curious reference to the bomos and the lantern-stand with the lantern from second-century Pergamum. It appears that this dedication to the God of Israel (God [is the] Lord [the one] who is forever) was intended for the local synagogue; see Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 163. 219. See Ta-Shma, Synagogal Sanctity, 35657. 220. E. M. Meyers and C. L. Meyers, Finders of a Real Lost Ark, 2436; C. L. Meyers and E. M. Meyers, Ark in Art, 17685; E. M. Meyers, Nabratein, 107779. 221. Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 26873, although compare her reservations on p. 272.
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75. Gold glass from a Roman catacomb depicting Jewish symbols and an open Torah ark.
The menorah is by far the most ubiquitous symbol in Jewish art of Late Antiquity, appearing on stone moldings, clay lamps, mosaic oors, and glass vessels.222 Menorot are prominent in Palestinian synagogues and often appear together with other Jewish symbols; in many cases, the Torah shrine stands at the center and is anked by two large and often lavishly ornamented menorot (e.g., ammat Tiberias, Sepphoris, Bet Alpha, Bet Shean, Naaran, and Susiya). Parts of three-dimensional menorot were found in the synagogues at Merot, Tiberias, En Gedi, orvat Rimmon, Eshtemoa, Susiya, and Maon ( Judaea).223 There is little doubt that these menorot not only were ornamental, but also served as a source of light in the synagogue hall. The menorah is often featured in Diaspora remains as well; large, centrally located menorot appear on mosaic oors at Bova Marina and Plovdiv and on the wall at the top of the aedicula at Dura Europos. It is also a prominent feature on the gold glass fragments from Rome (g. 75). The Sardis nds are particularly striking in this regard. Remains
222. Hachlili, Menorah, 2049. On the menorah of antiquity and the various meanings associated with it, see Sperber, History of the Menorah, 13559; Negev, Chronology of the Seven-Branched Menorah, 193210; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 7198; L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah, 14553. 223. Merot: Z. Ilan and Damati, Meroth, 50. For the other sites, see NEAEHL, loc. cit.; as well as Yeivin, Inscribed Marble Fragments, 209; Amit, Marble Menorah, 15568; idem, Synagogues, 143 65; Hachlili, Menorah, 17986, 28788; Fine, This Holy Place, 11421. Strauss reports that two small bronze candlesticks were discovered in Bet Shean (History and Form, 12).
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of some nineteen menorot have been found, one mentioned in an inscription, two threedimensional examples, and sixteen incised in brick, stone, or ceramics.224 An inscription from Sid attests to the donation of two menorot to that synagogue.225 Issues related to making a menorah or donating one to the synagogue are noted in rabbinic literature. One question concerns changing the purpose for which a menorah was donated while the name of the donor is still remembered: [If one] makes a menorah and a lamp for the synagogue, as long as the name of the owner or donor is not forgotten, one cannot use them for another purpose; when the name of the donor has been forgotten, one can use them for another purpose. 226 The term menorah, of course, might also refer to any lamp or other kind of light xture. However, the juxtaposition of the words menorah and lamp ( )would seem to indicate that the former refers to a candelabrum, and not merely an ordinary light xture. The fact that a special donation to a synagogue is being discussed also points to the fact that this was not an ordinary object. Both talmuds address the issue of menorot given to a synagogue by Jews and non-Jews; the Yerushalmi notes that an emperor named Antoninus, perhaps a reference to Caracalla (211217 c.e.), donated one such menorah to a synagogue.227 It has usually been assumed that the menorah depicted in synagogue art represented, in one form or another, an object that was to be found in that very synagogue. Dothan and others have gone so far as to claim that the depiction on the mosaic oor of ammat Tiberias was, in fact, a replica of what stood in the front of the hall.228 Whatever the case,
224. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 176. 225. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 36. 226. T Megillah 2, 14 (p. 352); and Lieberman, TK, V, 115455. 227. Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a; B Arakhin 6b. On donations to the ancient synagogue by gentiles, see Bickerman, Altars of Gentiles, 15658; White, Building Gods House, 7785. Providing light for a synagogue ( , per the medieval prayer following ) came to be considered a meritorious duty. See Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 27:21 (p. 613); ibid., Leviticus 6:2 (p. 141): Even though the Temple has been destroyed and the lights abolished, nevertheless [we have] synagogues and academies wherein we light [lights] and they are called a small sanctuary. Not a great deal is known about synagogue lighting in general. Windows were the main source of light (e.g., Baram), and buildings with clerestory windows were designed to provide an even greater amount of light. A reference to synagogue windows ([ , ]bright or glass windowssee Jastrow, Dictionary, I, 78) is found in Pirqei dRabbi Eliezer 10. See also PRK 11, 13 (p. 188). Lamps and candelabra, remains of which have been found at Kefar anania, Reov, Maon (Judaea), Bet Shean, Jericho, orvat Rimmon, and Sepphoris, were used regularly to provide articial light. See M Terumot 11, 10; M Pesaim 4, 4; T Megillah 2, 14 (p. 352). On the use of lamps in pagan settings, see MacMullen, Paganism, 45; and see Goitein, Mediterranean Society, II, 150, regarding the medieval synagogue. 228. See Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, 38; as well as Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 7576; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 253. Cf. however, Barag (Menorah, 46), who claims that depictions of the menorah at this time do not imitate contemporary functional objects.
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there can be little doubt that the menorah played a major role in the internal decoration of most synagogues in antiquity.229
ART
Synagogue decorations varied in both subject matter and artistic quality. Three types of ornamentation can be distinguished: (1) stone carvings, principally on the facade of the building but also inside the main hall, on friezes, architraves, capitals, and elsewhere; (2) mosaic oors, especially in the nave; and (3) frescoes on the interior walls of a building. Rarely, if ever, were all three types of decoration found together in one synagogue building; rather, only one type, or at the most two, were used at any one time and place.230 Stone Carvings. Widespread in the Galilean-type and Golan synagogues, this decoration was found on a buildings exterior and interior, i.e., on the door and window areas, on capitals, lintels, doorposts, as well as friezes, pilasters, gables, and arches.231 Although concrete data are lacking for the most part, it is reasonable to assume that when a permanent Torah shrine existed, it, too, was often richly decorated, as may be inferred from the aedicula fragment from Nevoraya.232 Stone carvings were featured in a variety of designs executed in great detail and at times on a sophisticated technical level. Such carvings from Capernaum and Chorazim, for example, are especially notable for their wealth of motifs and generally impressive execution (g. 76). This stands in sharp contrast to those from synagogues at Meiron, Gush alav, orvat Ammudim, Nevoraya, and Merot, where the decoration is much simpler and the level of execution often inferior. In many respects, artistic expression in the Golan was unlike that in the Galilee. The repertoire of designs and symbols in the former tends to be dierent, with Jewish symbols and gural representations very much in evidence. While there are also considerable dierences among the Golan synagogues, these variations seem less extreme than those found in the Galilean synagogues.233 The decoration in the Galilean-type and Golan synagogues were generally geometric and oral, although, as noted, faunal and, more rarely, human representations also ap229. On the signicance ascribed to the menorah in synagogue art, see below, Chap. 17. On its transformation into the Jewish symbol par excellence in Late Antiquity, see L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah. 230. See Vitto, Interior Decoration, 290300. 231. See Foerster, Ancient Synagogues of the Galilee, 290.; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 14366; as well as S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 35861. 232. See above, note 220. 233. Maoz, Art and Architecture of the Synagogues of the Golan, 98115; Hachlili, Late Antique Jewish Art from the Golan, 183212.
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76. Frieze from the Capernaum synagogue with the representation of a wagon, often interpreted as a portable Torah shrine.
pear.234 Animal representations appear on lintels (orvat Ammudim, Safed, Gush alav, Capernaum, and Dabbura), gables (Chorazim), and an orthostat (En Samsam), while human or mythological gures adorn friezes (Chorazim) and lintels (Capernaum, Rama, and e-Dikke). In a number of synagogues from the Galilee (Merot, Qana, Baram, and Bet Shearim) and the Golan (Dabbura and Rad), gures appearing on stone have been interpreted arguably as vestiges of zodiac signs.235 Generally speaking, human and faunal gures abound at Capernaum and Chorazim, yet they appear far less frequently in other Galilean-type synagogues. Mosaic Floors. These oors were not as ubiquitous in the Galilee or Golan as they were elsewhere; the oors in these regions were more often composed of earth or agstones. The mosaic oors that have been discovered usually bear very simple designs, appearing only in the later stages of the buildings, with the exception of the Merot and orvat Ammudim synagogues, where the mosaic pavements were part of the original phase (g. 77).236 Nevertheless, even in the Galilee, the synagogues at Sepphoris and ammat Tiberias featured the most elaborately decorated mosaic pavements as one might nd anywhere. However, from the Sea of Galilee southwardthe Jordan Valley, the Bet Shean area, Judaea, and the coastal regionmosaics constituted the main vehicle of synagogue decoration. As noted, a wide variety of motifs and designs are in evidence, from the simplest ones in Jericho, En Gedi, and Reov, to the more complex, featuring full-blown gural scenes (g. 78).237 The most striking example of the latter are Helios and the zodiac signs, attested in at least six synagogues in Byzantine Palestine to date: ammat Tiberias,
234. See Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen, 138203; Yeiven, Synagogue at Korazim, 11117. 235. Regarding the zodiac signs on stone moldings, see Z. Ilan and Damati, Meroth, 47, and bibliography cited there. 236. L. Levine, Excavations at the Synagogue of Horvat Ammudim, 1012. 237. See above, Chap. 7; and Ovadiah, Mosaic Art, 185203.
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77. Depiction of a soldier from the Merot synagogue, often identied as David. The inscription to the left reads: Yudan bar Shimon mani [?].
Bet Alpha, useifa on the Carmel, Naaran, Sepphoris, and Susiya.238 Even more common than the zodiac signs was the cluster of Jewish symbols which usually included the Torah shrine, menorah, lulav, ethrog, shofar, and incense shovel. In sharp contrast to the Galilean-type buildings, where there was a dearth of such representations (exceptional in this respect is a menorah on a Capernaum capital; g. 79), buildings elsewhere usually had many Jewish symbols. The earliest traces of mosaic oors are dated to the late third century (ammat Tiberias (Stratum I), orvat Ammudim, and En Gedi), and the use of gural representation became widespread from the fourth century onward. This conclusion, based on archaeological nds, dovetails neatly with the evidence from rabbinic sources: In the days of R. Abun [fourth century] they began depicting [gural images] on mosaic oors, and he did not object. 239 Biblical scenes were neither rare nor common; a number of motifs appear in various regions throughout the country: the Aqedah (Bet Alpha, Sepphoris); David (Gaza and probably Merot); Daniel (Susiya, Naaran); Aaron and the Tabernacle-Temple appurtenances and oerings (Sepphoris); and symbols of the tribes (Yaa). Mosaic pavements were no less ubiquitous among Diaspora synagogues, and it appears that almost every building discovered there to date had such oors: Gerasa, Apamea,
238. Hachlili, Zodiac in Ancient Jewish Art, 6177; eadem, Ancient Jewish Art and Archaeology Israel, 3019; eadem, Zodiac: A Review, 21958; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, VIII, 167218. 239. Y Avodah Zarah 3, 3, 42d; and the Genizah fragment published in J. N. Epstein, Yerushalmi Fragments, 20; and below, Chap. 13.
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78. Representation of an eagle with outstretched wings perched on double volutes incorporating a human head, from the Yaa synagogue.
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Sardis, Delos, Aegina, Stobi, Plovdiv, Ostia, Bova Marina, Naro, and Elche. Two features are particularly noteworthy: the degree to which mosaics dominated synagogue decorations throughout the Diaspora and the relative absence of gural representation.240 A few instances of gural images have been found (e.g., the Noah story at Gerasa, and the selection of animals, sh, and birds at Naro); Sardis presents a fascinating study of contrasts between its totally aniconic mosaic oor and wall revetments on the one hand and the lion statues and eagle reliefs in the center of the nave, on the other.241
240. See above, Chap. 8. 241. Two other exceptions should be mentioned. It is reported in the Bavli that a synagogue in Nehar-
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Frescoes. In contrast to mosaic remains, we have very little evidence for wall decorations from either archaeological or literary sources. Walls bore painted frescoes, as at Dura Europos and possibly Acmonia, or marble revetments (skoutlosis), as at Sardis.242 At several sites in Byzantine Palestine, painted pieces of plaster, apparently remains of frescoes, were found among the debris.243 An inscription from Susiya makes specic reference to the plastering of walls in a synagogue: May he be remembered for good, the holy sage R. Isi, the priest, the honored one, son of a rabbi, who made this mosaic and plastered its walls. 244 The only source in the Talmud which relates to this phenomenon is the rst part of the passage cited above: In the days of R. Yoanan they began depicting [gural images] on the walls, and he did not object. 245 Given the limited amount of preserved archaeological material, it is dicult to determine what type of decoration appeared on these plastered synagogue walls. In the synagogue at Reov, there are clear signs of paint on the walls, but no designs or representations. To date, the magnicent wall paintings at the synagogue of Dura Europos constitute the sole example of Jewish art represented by frescoes with a plethora of human and animal representations. Similar fresco decorations are known throughout Dura Europos in both religious and secular contexts.246 Not surprisingly, the Duran Jews used this technique as well. Nevertheless, as noted earlier, it is dicult to imagine that the rich artistic expression in Duras synagogue could have been the result of local inspiration only, i.e., the product of what was, in eect, a small and relatively isolated Jewish community that had existed in the city for no more than a generation or two. The fact remains, however, that another instance of this type of Jewish fresco art has yet to be discovered elsewhere in the Roman world.
ICONOCLASM
The destruction of gural art in ancient synagogues of Byzantine Palestine has been addressed only occasionally in the past. Since the earliest discoveries of these buildings, scholars have noticed that, in many instances, gural images had been intentionally defaced, sometimes in a wholesale fashion, at other times selectively. In certain cases, the gdea had a statue inside and that, despite this, a number of sages continued to pray there; see B Rosh Hashanah 24b; B Avodah Zarah 43b. On statue bases found in several Egyptian synagogues, see above, Chap. 4. 242. Majewski, Evidence for the Interior Decoration, 4650; and above, Chap. 8. 243. For example, at Reov; see Vitto, Rehob, 1272; idem, Byzantine Synagogue, 166. On Merot, see Z. Ilan, Synagogue and Beth Midrash of Meroth, 235. 244. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 75. 245. See above, note 239. 246. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 366.; Perkins, Art of Dura, 3369; Wharton, Reguring, 2363.
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ures destroyed were found on architectural elements of the buildings (e.g., Capernaum); in others (e.g., Naaran and Susiya), mosaic oors likewise suered vandalism (g. 80). Opinions are divided as to when this occurred, who was responsible, and why. Given the fact that this type of activity is almost impossible to date (for example, was it perpetrated after the building ceased to function as a synagogue or while it was still in operation?), positing the time of destruction and the perpetrators becomes rather speculative. The following are some of the main suggestions oered to date.247 Watzinger, believing the Galilean synagogues were a gift from the Roman emperor, claimed that zealous Jews, bolstered by rabbinic support, removed objectionable gures in an attempt to eradicate all traces of pagan inuence.248 Klein, however, dated this phenomenon to the Byzantine period generally, relating it to the Christian persecution of the Jews and Judaism.249 Sukenik and Ovadiah posited a seventh-century date, during the transition from Byzantine to Arab rule, assuming that the destruction was initiated by zealous Jews under the inuence of the iconoclastic movement then surfacing in the Byzantine and Arab worlds; Kitzinger has viewed this Jewish iconoclasm as a reaction to the emergence of the Christian cult of images.250 S. Stern has recently argued that this iconoclastic phenomenon was perpetrated by Jews and reected a major ideological shift
247. See Amit, Iconoclasm, 910; Wharton, Erasure; Fine, Iconoclasm. 248. Watzinger, Denkmler Palstinas, 116; Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen, 203. 249. S. Klein, History of Jewish Settlement, 3638. 250. Sukenik, Ancient Synagogue of Beth Alpha, 58; Ovadiah, Mosaic Art, 199; idem, Art of the Ancient Synagogues, 308, 316; Kitzinger, Cult of Images, 130 n. 204. See also Barber, Truth in Painting, 101936. On a Jewish polemic against Christian icons and a Christian response, see Baynes, Icons before Iconoclasm, 93106.
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in how gural representation was viewed by rabbis and laypeople alike.251 Avi-Yonah concluded that this iconoclastic process was more than a onetime occurrence; he posited several waves of Jewish iconoclastic zealotry, the rst occurring sometime in the early fourth century and the second in the seventh century, with the latter instance possibly linked in some way to Arab iconoclastic inuences.252 Finally, Mayer, Reifenberg, King, and Tsafrir have claimed that this vandalism was the work of Muslims in the eighth century, following a decree by the caliph Yazid II (721722 c.e.) that led to the systematic destruction of Christian images and crosses in both the public and private domain.253 Amit has published a preliminary study on this subject wherein he presents evidence primarily from Susiya, but also from Baram, Ashkelon, and Nevorayaindicating that this destruction was selective in nature and was perpetrated when these synagogues were still in operation.254 He thus concludes that Jews opposed to gural representation were responsible for these acts, as they were viewed as a breach of the Second Commandment. The rapid rise in the number of excavated synagogues, along with the increased scholarly attention given the issue of iconoclasm, has heightened awareness regarding the evidence for this phenomenon. Thus, while Chiat and Schick listed twelve and thirteen such instances, respectively, Amit has recorded twice that number.255 His more complete listing is intriguing. Half of the synagogues he mentions are in the Galilee, while nine others are found in the Golan. Thus, twenty-one of twenty-four examples, some 88%, hail from these northern regions. The three remaining examples are from Judaea properNaaran, Susiya, and Ashkelon. With the exception of Tiberias and Ashkelon, all the sites are not only rural, but lie in areas relatively far removed from the large urban, hellenized centers. Such places generally tend to be more conservative in orientation, as attested by their minimal use of Greek and the limited amount of gural representations. The latest excavations in Sepphoris also bear out this distinction, as the remains from this major urban site in the central Galilee show no signs of iconoclasm. This pattern would seem to support the claim of Sukenik, Ovadiah, S. Stern, and Amit that domestic Jewish social and religious pressures, rather than the decrees of a ruling
251. S. Stern, Synagogue Art, 37; idem, Figurative Art and Halakha, 41618; and below, Chap. 13. 252. Avi-Yonah, Synagogue Architecture, 7980. 253. Mayer and Reifenberg, Jewish Buildings, 18; King, Islam, Iconoclasm, 26677; Tsafrir, Archaeology and Art, 180. According to an eighth-century presbyter from Jerusalem named John, a Jewish sorcerer from Tiberias advised Yazid that if he wished to rule for thirty years, every kind of pictorial representation, on boards or in wall-mosaics or on holy vessels or altar-cloths, or anything else of the sort that is found in all Christian churches, should be obliterated and entirely destroyed; not only these, but also all the egies that are set up as decoration in the marketplaces of cities. See Schick, Christian Communities, 215. On the Islamic context of Byzantine and Jewish iconoclasm, see Crone, Iconoclasm, 59.; as well as Vasiliev, Iconoclastic Edict, 2347; Grabar, Formation of Islamic Art, 75103. 254. Amit, Iconoclasm, 916. 255. Chiat, Handbook of Synagogue Architecture, 344; Schick, Christian Communities, 203; Amit, Iconoclasm, 13.
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81. Representation of the Torah shrine in a mosaic oor from the Jericho synagogue.
power imposing its will on the Jews, were at the root of much of this iconoclastic activity.256 This claim, of course, does not preclude the possibility that these Jews were also inuenced by outside phenomenawhether of Muslim or Christian origin.257 Perhaps here, as elsewhere, it would be best not to fall into the trap of seeking only one overriding explanation. The forces at play may well have been many, spread over generations, stemming from a number of sources, and expressing a varied agenda. Religious zealotry was not the monopoly of Jews only at this time, as the destructive forays of the monk Barsauma, together with the destruction of images at the ammat Gader baths and on the Madeba map, attest.258 Given the limited and uncertain evidence at hand, settling for other-than-tentative suggestions would be hazardous.259 A noteworthy and undoubtedly related phenomenon is the fact that synagogues built (or remodeled) in the seventh century and thereafter were invariably aniconic (e.g., En Gedi, Jericho [g. 81], Reov, Maoz ayyim, and ammat Tiberias). Thus, Jewish art at the very end of Late Antiquity clearly shifted toward a strict avoidance of gural representation, much as it had centuries earlier in the Hasmonean and Herodian eras. How
256. In this regard, see also Avigad, Beth Shearim, 28182. 257. See Schick, Christian Communities, 21819. On the hostility of Christians, Jews, and Muslims to art in this period, see Grabar, Liconoclasme, 93112. 258. Tsafrir, Archaeology and Art, 113 and 427. 259. On a similarly nuanced explanation of the damage to churches in Palestine in the seventh to eighth centuries, see Schick, Christian Communities, 180219.
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the iconoclasm discussed above related to this new tendencyas cause, eect, or parallel developmentmust remain moot for the present.
The general thrust of this source is clear; sanctity is applicable to synagogue appurtenances not listed in the mishnah. The tradents of this source appear to have been minimalists. The opening statement assigns synagogue vessels the sanctity of the synagogue
260. M Megillah 3, 1. See also above, Chap. 6. 261. According to a tradition in the Bavli, quoted in the names of R. Zeira and R. Mattenah, no sanctity whatsoever is attached to these objects (B Megillah 32a). 262. On the identication of the word with the Golan, see S. Klein, Transjordan, 51; idem, Estates of R. Judah Ha-Nasi, 549; Httenmeister and Reeg, Antiken Synagogen, I, 13940. 263. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. See Ratner, Ahavat Zion vYerushalayim, loc. cit.
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itself. The objects are holy, but only to a lower degree; i.e., they have a status similar to that of the synagogue building itself. However, the above source introduces an agreedupon exception: the kila, which is expressly associated with the ark, bears the latters sanctity. In three casesbima, lukhin, and inglina dierence of opinion is alluded to regarding their sanctity, though the Babylonian tradents (R. Judah in the name of Samuel) prefer the more limited option. The extent to which this was an exclusively Babylonian issue or practice cannot be ascertained. Finally, it is noteworthy that the objects in dispute generally seem to cluster around two foci of the synagogues interior, the bima and the Torah or Torah shrine. Despite its apparent richness, this source nevertheless remains enigmatic. While there is a consensus regarding certain terms used, others are far from clear. In the former category we may include the kila, gulta, bima, makusha, and migdal. It is possible to identify the terms kila and gulta based on their connection with the ark and their frequent usage in other rabbinic sources. The kila is a curtain or canopy, and the term probably refers to the parokhet on the arks outside or inside.264 It parallels another term, perisah, appearing in the Bavli.265 The fact that this is the only exception agreed upon by our source as having a level of sanctity equal to that of the Torah ark is a clear indication of a close association with it. According to R. Abbahu, an additional covering the gultawas placed beneath the kila, perhaps resembling the depiction of the Torah shrine in the northern synagogue in Bet Shean.266 Mentioned frequently in rabbinic literature, the gulta is some sort of cloak, often made of wool. Such a garment may denote high rank and honor, or it may have been the garment that a sage wore during prayer, or both.267 The other three objects listed in our source are likewise easily identiable. We have already spoken of the bima. The makusha was an instrument for weaving or, more likely in this context, a bell or knocker, while a migdal was a storage chest.268 The relevance of the latter two items to a synagogue will be discussed below. More problematic are the kaltira (wooden bima? footstool? couch?), lukhin (boards on which the Torah scroll was placed [lectern?] or on which writing lessons were conducted),
264. For this and subsequent identications, the following commentaries have been consulted: the traditional commentators to the Yerushalmi, Pnei Moshe, and Qorban Ha-edah; the Arukh Hashalem with Kohuts comments; Jastrows and Sokolos dictionaries; and S. Krausss Synagogale Altertmer. All the above agree that the kila is to be identied with the arks curtainwith the exception of Krauss, who regards it as a canopy over the ark (p. 381). 265. See B Megillah 26b; see also Y Shabbat 20, 17c. For other uses of the kila, see Genesis Rabbah 36, 1 (p. 334); and Leviticus Rabbah 5, 1 (p. 99). 266. See NEAEHL, I, 234. 267. Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7c; Y Taanit 4, 1, 67c; Y Sanhedrin 10, 2, 28c. On using the talit in much the same way, see Y Bikkurim 3, 3, 65d; and L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 52, 175. 268. Sokolo, Dictionary, 289.
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and inglin (poles for the mantle? pegs for the Torah chest? a lectern?). The fact that so many suggestions have been oered for each of these terms indicates their lack of clarity. In attempting to determine their interpretation, one must examine not only the source as a whole, but also each term in its immediate context. Since some terms are related directly to the sanctity of the synagogue and others to the sanctity of the ark, this distinction might well facilitate the identication of the item in question as well as its possible location in the synagogue hall. Benches were physically attached to the synagogue building and therefore were considered to have the same degree of sanctity as the synagogue.269 It may not be coincidental that our source begins with this item about which there is no dispute; i.e., benches are similar in sanctity to the synagogue building itself. The same appears to have been true with respect to the next item, the kaltira, which was probably one of the synagogue halls permanent xtures whose precise meaning has not as yet been satisfactory elucidated. It would seem that someone at the time saw reason to dene the bima and lukhin as objects associated with the arkif not owing to their location, then at least to their liturgical function. It would be reasonable to assume that the bima in this source is a raised platform on which the Torah was read, and then to interpret the term lukhin as a lectern on the bima.270 Since they are paired, it seems that they might have been considered one unit. If they were located toward the center of the hall, it would explain why this particular source prefers to associate them with the synagogues interior rather than with the ark. Although one opinion in antiquity associated the inglin with the ark, the above pericope connects it with the sanctity of the synagogue in general.271 Therefore, it would appear more reasonable to interpret this term to mean poles for the mantle, that is, part of the synagogue interior near the ark though not related directly to it.272 Associating a number of the objects noted above with the ark emphasizes the centrality of the Torah shrine in the synagogue building. Its importance is further reected in those mosaic oors where the ark is surrounded by Jewish symbols. The Torah shrine itself is regularly depicted in great detail, with its doors, curtains, accompanying poles,
269. Pnei Moshe and Sokolo have suggested that the reference here to benches may, in fact, refer to footstools, although this is not the usual meaning of the term; nor do we know much about the use and placement of footstools in synagogues. Cf., however, Kraelings identication of a raised part of the benches at Dura Europos as a footrest (Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 16). Alternatively, the term may refer to benches for important individuals, as we have noted above. 270. See Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 35960. For another view, see the comments by M. Simon on B Megillah 32a (Soncino, p. 193 n. 3). 271. Identied as poles by Qorban ha-edah; as pegs to hold the ark in place by Pnei Moshe; and as a lectern by Jastrow and Krauss. 272. See, however, Sukeniks somewhat far-fetched suggestion (Designs of the Lection, 22125) that the term refers to a lectern, an identication for which he claims to have found conrmation in certain objects appearing in synagogue art.
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decorations, etc. Thus, a number of items appearing in the above listspecically those associated by some with the sanctity of the arkwere probably used in the context of Torah-related activities, either as accoutrements to the ark or as part of the Torah-reading liturgy. The last two objects listed in the source, makusha and migdal, are not related to the sanctity of the synagogue per se. The former indicates how the Torah chest might have been used for purposes other than housing the Torah. It seems clear that this chest may have been used to store other items as well, perhaps for safekeeping or possibly storing them because they were in some way related to synagogue functions. Even though it is not clear how a makusha was used in a synagogue setting,273 this object was important to the people of the Golan, as they saw t to keep it in a holy place. According to R. Ami, the local population agreed upon this arrangement from the outset. In addition, other synagogue-related items were kept in a separate cabinet that stood in the synagogue hall. According to our source, R. Yonah once had a cabinet built, and presumably it was located in the synagogue. This sage further stipulated that holy books should be placed on the top shelves, while other items could be placed on the bottom ones, most probably in order to separate the holy and the profane or to distinguish between varying degrees of holiness.
INSCRIPTIONS
Inscriptions were an integral part of the synagogue setting and were found in almost every part of the buildingon its facade and throughout its interior, including the area around the Torah shrine. Columns and chancel screens were often used as well, but mosaic oors bore most of this epigraphical material.274 Synagogue inscriptions are usually short, no more than ten to twenty words. We have already discussed the extensive use of this form of epigraphical evidence throughout this volume; below is a brief overview of this important evidence. Over ve hundred inscriptions relate to the synagogue and its ocials; some 60% come from the Diaspora and the remainder from Roman-Byzantine Palestine. Inscriptions were written in any one of the languages spoken by Jews in a given area; Greek and Aramaic generally predominated in Palestine with Hebrew constituting a minor, though not entirely insignicant, component. At several sites in the Upper Galilee and southern Judaea, Hebrew appears to have occupied a central role. Greek dominates the Diaspora
273. See S. Klein, Estates of R. Judah Ha-Nasi, 54950; Lieberman, TK, V, 1154; and Y Betzah 5, 2, 63a. 274. Only a few inscriptions state explicitly that the donation was for a synagogue: ammat Gader (Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 34); Bet Guvrin (ibid., no. 71); Gerasa (Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 10); and Jerusalem (ibid., no. 19).
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evidence, though in the western part of the Empire, Latin was sometimes used, and Iranian appears in some fteen inscriptions from Dura Europos.275 Inscriptions served a number of purposes. At times they were used to identify specic artistic depictions, such as the Hebrew legends that invariably accompanied the representations of the various signs and seasons of the zodiac (e.g., ammat Tiberias, Bet Alpha, Sepphoris, and Naaran).276 Biblical scenes, though rare, almost invariably have accompanying inscriptionsusually in Hebrewthat identify the gures depicted, as was the case with the Aqedah mosaic in Bet Alpha and the representations of David in Gaza, Daniel in Naaran and Susiya, Noahs sons in Gerasa, and Aaron in Sepphoris. In the Dura synagogue, inscriptions identify nine gures appearing on its walls.277 Moreover, the Jericho synagogue contains a biblical phrase ( Ps. 125:5) and the Merot synagogue quotes a complete verse (Deut. 28:6). Inscriptions also may have been instrumental in fostering memories of the past and hopes for the future. This is particularly true of the lists of the twenty-four priestly courses that have been found in both Palestine and the Diaspora. Their presence seems to have been intended to maintain and strengthen national-religious memories and aspirations.278 A number of inscriptions from the Diaspora serve as ocial communal documents attesting to decisions and actions taken by the community. The three inscriptions from Berenice are a case in point, as are the manumission inscriptions from the Bosphorus region.279 The inscription from Stobi is a further example, as it records the contribution and transference of part of a building to the community by Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos. In Palestine, an inscription serving as a communal document comes from En Gedi. In its prefatory paragraph, the inscription lists the fathers of the world according to I Chron. 1, the zodiac signs, the months of the year, the names of the three biblical patriarchs, the three friends of Daniel, and the three patrons. A series of warnings to members of the community then follows. The main section of this inscription instructs the members of the congregation in their relations with one another and the outside world, particularly with respect to the secret of the community. 280 However, the overwhelming majority of synagogue inscriptions is dedicatory in nature. The wealthy would commemorate their gifts, which were a means of gaining prestige while, at the same time, fullling a religious vow and serving the common good.281 As
275. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 300317. On evidence for the use of Hebrew in Late Antiquity, see de Lange, Revival of Hebrew, 34258. 276. For these and other sites listed below, see NEAEHL, passim. 277. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 26972. 278. See above, Chap. 7. 279. See above, Chap. 4. 280. L. Levine, Inscription in the En Gedi Synagogue, 14045; and below, Chap. 10. 281. See Rajak, Jews as Benefactors, 30519.
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noted, these inscriptions could appear anywhere in the building and were often placed on the very object being donated. At times, the inscription itself specied the gift; on occasion, the precise sum donated is mentioned (e.g., Berenice) and, on others, the length of mosaic oor contributed (e.g., Apamea). However, in most instances, the amount given is unstated (e.g., ammat Tiberias). Usually the donation was made by an individual or family, although more generally formulated inscriptions acknowledging the contributions of a larger group of people, such as the community in general, are noted. Inscriptions contain a great deal of information: the language in use at that time and place, the prosopography of the donors, and the donors professions and ocial titles. As might be expected, donors were almost always members of the local community.282 However, there are also instances when people from one city took up residence elsewhere and donated to their new synagogue, although they continued to refer to themselves by their place of origin. We have had occasion to note this phenomenon in Rome and Jerusalem, as well as in Byzantine Sepphoris, where communities of Jews from Tyre and Sidon lived but continued to refer to themselves in terms of their former residence.283 Only rarely do we read of a synagogue supported by people who were not local inhabitants, as at the mineral springs of ammat Gader, where donors hailed from Arbel, Capernaum, Emmaus, Sepphoris, and Kefar Aqavia.284 Occasionally, the names of the artisans are recorded in inscriptions, such as Marianos, anina, and Yosi Halevi. The rst twofather and sonlaid the mosaic oors of synagogues in Bet Alpha and Bet Shean, while the third worked in Alma and Baram in the Upper Galilee.285 Precious, though rare, are inscriptions that mention the date of a buildings construction or renovation. Such pieces of information have been retrieved from the synagogues of Nabratein, Bet Alpha, Ashkelon, and Gaza in Palestine, and Stobi and Dura Europos in the Diaspora.286 The various eras invoked might include the reign of a given emperor (Dura Europos, Bet Alpha), a municipal era (Gaza, Ashkelon), a famous event, such as the battle of Actium (Stobi?), the Seleucid era (Dura Europos), creation of the world (Susiya, Bet Alpha), sabbatical years (Susiya), and the Temples destruction (Nevoraya). One unique inscription may be classied as literary in nature. The Reov halakhic in282. Roth-Gerson (Greek Inscriptions, 67) has put forth the unlikely suggestion that some of the donors to the ammat Tiberias synagogue were gentiles. In a similar vein, Hezser ( Jewish Literacy, 405) surmises that the major donor, Severus, referred to as , was either a slave or freedman of the Patriarch. 283. Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 24. 284. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 33. 285. Ibid., nos. 1 and 3; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, nos. 4 and 5. See also the inscription from Tiberias mentioning Abraham the marble-cutter, though it is unclear whether he ever worked in a synagogue setting (Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 14). 286. On Palestinian sites, see NEAEHL, passim. Stobi: Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 15059. Dura: Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 26368.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
scription features laws relating to sabbatical year observances in northern Palestine, listing the areas to be included in this observance and the fruits and vegetables prohibited to Jews during this year.287 Another unique inscription comes from the Jericho synagogue and acknowledges the donations of congregants in very owery, poetic language, amazingly reminiscent of later Jewish prayers that oer a blessing to the congregation as a whole (g. 82).288 The unusual inscription from Byzantine Aphrodisias almost certainly originated in a synagogue setting. As will be recalled, the list of some 125 donors, including Jews and proselytes and an almost equal number of God-fearers, is the longest synagogue inscription known to date. Some of these people were donors to a soup kitchen, and the names as well as their titles and professions, especially their prominence in civic aairs, are most illuminating.289 A number of inscriptions from the Diaspora attest to the fact that non-Jews as well were deeply involved in synagogue aairs. Several pagan women, such as Julia Severa from Acmonia and Capitolina from Tralles in Asia Minor, were prominently mentioned as donors to synagogues. While Julia remained fully pagan, use of the term theosebs suggests that Capitolina was a God-fearer who was identied with the local Jewish community and actively involved in its aairs.290 Finally, we learn that a number of Jewish donors were active in urban and provincial aairs. Several Sardis patrons are listed as city coun287. This inscriptionthe longest known from Palestine, containing 29 lines and 365 wordsis sui generis in its halakhic content, much of which also appears in rabbinic sources. The inscription itself was given prominent display in the buildings narthex, next to the main entrance. Clearly, the Reov community was expressing its deep concern with such halakhic matters, reecting a conservative bent which is further exhibited in the almost total absence of both gural representations and the minimal use of Greek. 288. See Foerster, Synagogue Inscriptions, 1240; and below, Chap. 16. 289. Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 93123; and comments above, Chap. 8. 290. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 30 and 33; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 5860, 15758.
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cillors, and from Hungary we read of one Cosimus who was in charge of the customs station at Spondill.291
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Finally, a preacher or teacher may have sat on the podium when addressing the congregation, and if there had been a Cathedra of Moses in the synagogue, it might well have been used for this purpose. As mentioned above, several of these chairs were located along the Jerusalem-oriented wall or close to it. In many (most?) synagogues, the actual Torah-reading ceremony may have taken place on this podium as well. Given the number of people involved in the reading at any one time (usually three or fourtwo gabbaim, a reader, and perhaps one called up to the Torah) and the need for a table on which to set the Torah scroll, a sizable area would have been required. Indeed, a number of synagoguesas notedhad a large, elevated platform in the front of the hall that may well have been the focus for this and other liturgical activities noted above. Some synagogues, however, had a single or double platform, which was quite small. This might have been adequate for a Torah shrine, menorah, or something of that order, but not for the activities just mentioned. Thus, a second possible focus of Jewish liturgy was the bima or a table in the center or, in some cases, the back of the synagogues main hall. The Torah scroll would then have been brought into the hall from the front and placed there for reading, the targum would have been rendered there, and the sermon might have been delivered there. Byzantine churches often had a podium in the center, like the ambo in Aegean buildings and the semicircular bema in Syrian churches.295 The location of a teacher or preacher in the center of the hall is possibly reected in an inscription found near four stone slabs, in the very center of the nave at Sardis, referring to a priest and sophodidaskalos. Seager and Kraabel have suggested that the structure resting on these slabs may have been some sort of platform from which this sophodidaskalos taught.296 The absence of a central bima at most synagogue sites, especially in Palestine, may be due to one of two reasons: either the bima was not all that ubiquitous or it was usually made of wood, a perishable material that leaves no remains over time in normal (i.e., humid) climatic conditions. This last alternative should not be considered simply a convenient excuse for what has not been found. The fact is that in the Second Temple era bimot are regularly noted as being made of wood.297 There seems to have been a third focus of the synagogue liturgy, which, to date, has not found expression architecturallypresumably because it required no material props. The prayer leaderazzan or shelia tzibburprobably stood in the nave, before the podium and Torah ark located along the Jerusalem-oriented wall, which the congregation faced
blessingL.L.] may not approach later on [when the Temple is rebuilt]. See also Z. Safrai, Dukhan, Aron and Teva 6971. 295. Mathews, Early Churches, 120, 14849. 296. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 170. As noted above, the bima may have been located elsewhere in the nave, possibly along the back wall, as at Bet Shearim, Ostia, and Naro. See Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 36. 297. For example, Neh. 8:4; M Sotah 7, 8; T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273).
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during the recitation of the Amidah prayer.298 The frequently recurring phrases in rabbinic literature he who passes before the ark ( ) and he who goes down before the ark ( ) refer to such a prayer leader,299 who apparently stood on the oor of the synagogue hall below the ark and faced it; this may be the best way to understand the realia behind the phrase to go down before the ark. Moreover, the above two terms also indicate the prayer leaders proximity to the podium on which the Torah shrine stood (i.e., .) This proximity is conrmed by the term ( draw near), used in describing the prayer leader or azzan as he approached the ark before reciting the Amidah prayer.300 One tradition quotes R. Menaem as saying: Do not say to one who is leading the Amidah prayer [lit., passing before the ark], come and pray, but rather come and draw near [i.e., lead the prayer]. 301 A further mention of the setting of the prayer leader comes from later sources, where we learn of the custom of two people standing beside the azzan, a practice probably derived from public fast-day ceremonies.302 Tractate Soferim relates the following: Similarly, it is not desirable that a azzan should stand by himself in front of the Torah ark; rather, there should also be someone to his right and someone to his left, as against the [three] patriarchs. 303 A parallel tradition is found in the almost contemporaneous eighth-century midrash Pirqei de R. Eliezer, which also relates that two people should stand beside the azzan. The midrash attributes this custom to the war against the Amalekites, when Moses was anked on either side by Aaron and Hur (Exod. 17:12): from this you learn that the prayer leader should not pray unless there are two people standing [by his side]. 304 Finally, a fascinating tradition notes a very prominent role forand most unusual image ofthe azzan on the Hoshanah Rabbah festivities (i.e., the last day of Sukkot): and when the rst day of the holiday [Sukkot] came, all Israel, adults and children, would take their lulavim in their right hands and ethrogim in their left, and all would know that Israel
298. On a similar arrangement according to Maimonides, see his Laws of Prayer 11, 4; and comments in Blidstein, Prayer, 21112. 299. For an attempt to explain these various terms in specic chronological contexts, see Z. Weiss, Location of Shelia Tzibbur, 821, the bibliography cited there, and esp. nn. 6 and 7, as well as the critique of D. Rosenthal (Transformation of Eretz Israel Traditions, 2527), who suggests a geographical distinction between Babylonia and Palestine, as opposed to Z. Weiss chronological one. See also Elbogen, Studies in Jewish Liturgy, 70411; Scholem, Jewish Gnosticism, 20; Gruenwald, Song of the Angels, 47981. 300. Leviticus Rabbah 23, 4 (p. 531); Midrash on Psalms 19, 2 (p. 82a). 301. Y Berakhot 4, 4, 8b; Genesis Rabbah 49, 23 (pp. 5067). See also Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 35051. 302. Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Beshala, 1 (pp. 18081); Tanuma, Beshala, 27. 303. Tractate Soferim 14, 9 (p. 263). 304. Pirqei de R. Eliezer 44. See also a similar tradition in what appears to be a late addition to PRK 3, 1 (p. 36).
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was victorious in judgment. And when Hoshanah Rabbah would come, they would take willow branches and make seven haqafot [encirclements], and the azzan of the synagogue would stand like an angel of God with a Torah scroll in his arm, and the people would encircle him as they once did the altar. 305 When the piyyut (liturgical poem) was introduced into the synagogue service in the fourth or fth century, it was often intended to replace the regular prayer service led by the azzan or shelia tzibbur by incorporating the mandatory prayers into its composition.306 At such times the paytan undoubtedly stood in the same place where the prayer leader stood. Some piyyutim contained choral elements (refrains, responses), and it has also been suggested that a chorus may have joined the paytan in this recitation. However, there is no way to determine where such a chorus might have stood.307 On the basis of the above, let us attempt to sketch the evolution of the synagogue from a liturgical-architectural perspective. At the outset, i.e., in Second Temple times, there seems to have been only one liturgical focus within the synagogue building, i.e., in the middle of the hall where the Torah chest was brought and the Torah-reading ceremony was held. As has been argued in Chapter 5, regular communal prayer had not, as yet, been instituted in the ordinary pre-70 Judaean synagogue, and it is probable that the priestly blessing was not yet recited outside the Temple precincts in the pre-70 era. According to Lukes description of Jesus appearance in the Nazareth synagogue and here it is immaterial whether what is reected is, in fact, an early rst-century Judaean setting or a late rst-century Diaspora oneJesus, upon concluding the haftarah, immediately sat down and preached, presumably while sitting near the lectern or table in the center of the synagogue hall. A second stage in synagogue liturgy and architecture emerged in the third century, when the earlier, almost exclusive Torah-reading focus was expanded to include other modes of worship. Evidence from rabbinic literature now begins to relate more and more to the prayer component in communal Jewish worship. Whereas early discussions of synagogue liturgy in tannaitic literature are found almost exclusively in Tractate Megillah of the Mishnah and Tosefta (focusing on the Torah reading), from the mid third century onward many more discussions are found in Tractate Berakhot, which is devoted to issues of prayer.308
305. Midrash on Psalms 17, 5 (pp. 64b65a). See also Yalqut Shimoni, Psalms, 703. 306. See below, Chap. 16. 307. Fleischer, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 13336. See also idem, Studies on the Inuence of Choral Elements, 1848, where it is suggested that the two people on either side of the azzan may have constituted the chorus (pp. 2526). 308. Tractate Megillah in the talmuds by no means abandons synagogue matters. Since many amoraic discussions elaborate or comment on mishnaic material, and since most synagogue matters do, in fact,
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Archaeologically, this new emphasis on prayer, and the need for a particular orientation toward Jerusalem in the Amidah prayer, nd expression in synagogues now oriented toward Jerusalem. Such an orientation is reected, inter alia, in the facades of the Galilean buildings, the podiums of Khirbet Shema and Nevoraya, and the aedicula of Dura.309 A third stage in the evolution of the ancient synagogues interior is clearly in evidence by the fourth century with the widespread introduction of a permanent Torah shrine on the Jerusalem wall of the synagogues main hall. Several already existing synagogues in Byzantine Palestine now changed their mode of orientation dramatically: instead of entrances in the direction of Jerusalem, as had been the case earlier, there was now a podium with either a niche or an apse. Moreover, at some point during this Byzantine era, a number of synagogues expanded their facilities, sometimes adopting a Christian basilical plan. Examples of expansion at this time are evident at Qatzrin, ammat Tiberias (I), Maoz ayyim, and Nevoraya. It is dicult to know how the nave of the synagogue was now used. It may well have been kept empty to allow for a shift of attention from one focus to another. Perhaps this was the case at Sardis, where, in addition to the aediculae at the eastern entrances, a stone table and some sort of additional installation (for a teacher?) were located in dierent parts of the nave. Thus, in the case of Sardis, it is doubtful whether ordinary members of the congregation occupied much, if any part, of the nave itself. Likewise, it is also dicult to imagine that the congregation regularly occupied the central nave in synagogues having elaborate decorations of mosaic oors with intricate motifs, both ornate and symbolic, as those found in Byzantine Palestine. Thus, it would appear that, in many cases, the seating of the congregation was conned, for the most part, to the side aisles.310
appear in Mishnah Megillah, it is only natural that relevant later traditions found their way into these tractates of the Yerushalmi and Bavli. 309. At Dura, depressions in the middle of the hall may indicate that a table or platform was once located there, and thus this synagogue would have had two liturgical foci. 310. Although the setting diered considerably, the situation in some (many?) synagogues may have been similar to that described by Krautheimer (Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture, 159) with regard to the Hagia Sophia church: However this revelation was reserved for the few admitted to the nave during services: the clergy led by the patriarch, and the Emperor accompanied by his court. The large mass of the faithful, gathered in aisles and galleries, saw only fragments of the building, just as the solemn celebration of the services was revealed to them only in fragments. It had long been liturgical custom in the Aegean coastlands to reserve the nave for the performance of the clergy. . . . The nave, then, was a stage on which the procession moved along a solemn path from the royal gate towards the solea, and along the solea into the bima. During much of the Mass, however, this stage remained empty. Yet, even here, there is no consensus with respect to the naves usage in the church setting (Mathews, Early Churches, 12425), and it may well be that dierent customs prevailed in dierent places. The implication of such a limited seating arrangement in some synagogues is enormous. Not many people could nd a place on the side benches, and even if mats and wooden benches were added in the aisles, the number would not be large. Thus, in such cases we may be dealing with small communities,
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It is no wonder, then, that liturgy and architecture went hand in hand in the synagogue of Late Antiquity to create a degree of architectural and liturgical balance. The building underwent a series of far-reaching changes. It acquired greater sanctity, and its liturgy developed, especially in the areas of prayer and piyyut. The building developed a series of foci: the bima in the front of the hall, where the ark was located and the priests stood for the benediction, the place where the prayer leader stood, and a possible podium in the center or back of the hall. This range of foci gave expression to the various facets of the worship service, striking a balance of sorts between various modes of worship while also emphasizing the corporate nature of the community. This communal dimension informed the synagogue liturgy as well. The Torah reading remained central and was characterized by active participation of the congregation. The azzan served not only as the congregational prayer leader, but also as a surrogate for individuals unable to recite the prayers for themselves. He thus stood on the oor of the nave, level with the congregation, yet close to the holy. In the part of the worship service that bore an entirely dierent character, the priests stood on the bima near the Torah ark, relatively removed from the congregation, and blessed the people in the name of God. Thus, each of these varying modes found its particular setting within the synagogue building. No hierarchy governed these proceedings; no single set of divinely inspired individuals ociated. Whether during the Torah and haftarah readings, the recitation of the targum, sermon, prayer, or piyyut, an ordinary Jew had the opportunity to participate actively in the synagogue ritual. The synagogues often modest size, the absence of a clergy, and its multifocal liturgy articulated a message of participation, inclusion, and community.
or with communities whose members did not always attend services, or a steady ow of people entering and leaving the synagogue (Tractate Soferim 10, 6 [p. 217]). It is equally possible that many locales had more than one synagogue (e.g., Baram) that have not been discovered as yet.
ten
he synagogue was created by the local Jewish community in response to its need for a central institution that would provide a range of services. As a result, the synagogue became rmly rooted in Jewish communities of Late Antiquity as their communal institution par excellence. The practice among some (many?) Jews of referring to the synagogue as a bet am (house of people)1to the chagrin of some rabbisclearly indicates the nature of the institution, which was to serve the community in a wide spectrum of activities. The Mishnah views this communal dimension in the following fashion: And what things belong to the town itself? For example, the plaza, the bath, the synagogue, the Torah chest, and [holy] books. 2 Synagogue ocials thus were beholden to their respective communities and not to any outside authority.3
1. B Shabbat 32a. 2. M Nedarim 5, 5; see also B Betzah 39b. The communal dimension of the synagogue is also reected in a rabbinic dispute between Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai; see T Tohorot 8, 10 (p. 669). 3. On the relation of institutions such as the Patriarchate and the rabbinate to the synagogue, see below, Chaps. 12 and 13. On the organization of villages generally throughout the region at this time, see Graininger, Village Government, 17995 and bibliography cited there.
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COMMUNITY CONTROL
It was the townspeople or their chosen representatives who had ultimate authority in synagogue matters. Thus, in addressing the issue of whether or not to sell communal property, the Mishnah states that it was the local population ( ) that makes that decision, while the Tosefta (according to R. Judah) notes that appointed parnasim should act on the institutions behalf, but only after the local townspeople grant them the requisite authority.4 In fact, the Yerushalmi makes it quite clear that synagogue ocials were dependent upon the community at large: The three [representatives] of the synagogue [act on behalf of ] the [entire] synagogue; the seven [representatives] of the townspeople [act on behalf of ] the [entire] town. 5 Thus, appointed synagogue ocials had the full range of authority to act in matters pertaining to their institution; nevertheless, in the nal analysis, they were only as strong as the power vested in them by the community. The Bavli makes this point clearly in its discussion of the mishnah dealing with the sale of a synagogue or its holy objects. Rava notes that the restrictions recorded in this mishnah were in eect only when the seven town representatives acted on their own initiative. If, however, a decision had been made by the entire town ( ,) then any type of sale made by these representatives would be valid, even if the synagogue were to be converted into a tavern.6 The above traditions probably refer to most congregations, in rural as well as urban settings. However, we also read of synagogues that operated under the patronage of a wealthy individual, an oligarchy of wealthy members, or, as was sometimes the case in Babylonia, a rabbi.7 In such instances, power and authority ipso facto became highly cen4. M Megillah 3, 1; T Megillah 2, 12 (p. 351). 5. Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a. The existence of a body of seven at this time is clearly indicated by Josephus (War 2, 571). Moreover, if his descriptions in Antiquities 4, 214 and 287, are indeed anachronistic, then he may be alluding to such an institution there as well. According to one second-century tradition, three representatives of the congregation ( ) had the authority to determine whether a maimed rstborn animal could be slaughtered; see M Bekhorot 5, 5; T Bekhorot 3, 25 (p. 538); B Bekhorot 36b. What the term refers to here is unclear, but it may indeed be to some group other than a synagogue congregation. See also M Zavim 3:2. 6. B Megillah 26ab; see also ibid., 27a. The Bavli, for its part, makes specic mention of the extensive authority and responsibility wielded by the community. See above, Chap. 8, for a discussion of the synagogue in the Babylonian setting. The Toseftan tradition (Megillah 2, 17 [p. 352]), in which R. Elazar bought a synagogue in pre-70 Jerusalem, is specically noted in B Megillah 26a. Cf. above, Chap. 3. A striking statementif indeed historically reliableof the communal involvement of Jews throughout the Roman world is found in the biography of Alexander Severus in Scriptores Historiae Augustae (45, 67). Following Jewish and Christian practice, the emperor suggested that the names of candidates for Imperial appointments be announced beforehand in order to give everyone an opportunity to lodge a protest. See M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, no. 523. 7. B Megillah 26ab. On synagogues associated with individuals, see below; there may have been an oligarchal setting at ammat Tiberias. On rabbinic synagogues, see B Megillah 26a.
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tralized. Whether these types of synagogues were primarily urban or rural, and how many did, in fact, operate in this latter fashion, is dicult to assess. The control exercised by the community included the hiring and ring of synagogue functionaries. One account notes that the synagogue community of Tarbanat 8 dismissed one R. Simeon when the latter proved unwilling to comply with their requests: The villagers said to him: Pause between your words [either when reading the Torah or rendering the targum], so that we may relate this to our children. 9 He went and asked [the advice of ] R. anina, who said to him: Even if they [threaten to] cut o your head, do not listen to them. And he [R. Simeon] did not take heed [of the congregants request], and they dismissed him from his position as sofer. 10 Needless to say, such authority carried with it the responsibility of locating competent personnel, and such searches were undoubtedly a common occurrence. So, for example, the communities of Simonias and Bostra approached leading sages for help in this respect.11 Around the turn of the third century, the former asked R. Judah I to nd someone who could preach, judge, be a azzan and teacher of children, and do everything else for us. 12 The person recommended, or appointed, by R. Judah, Levi b. Sisi, made a somewhat less than favorable rst impression. A similar request was made of R. Simeon b. Laqish in the third century while visiting Bostra.13 Given the centrality and importance of the synagogue, communitiesor, in the case of large cities, individual congregationswould often judge themselves and others by how successful and impressive their respective institutions appeared. This sense of pride is reected in an already noted exclamation made by R. ama bar anina to R. Hoshaya while touring the synagogues of Lod: How much [money] have my ancestors invested here [i.e., in these buildings]! The response of R. Hoshaya is likewise of interest, reect8. Although at times disputed, it is generally agreed that Tarbanat was located on the border between the Lower Galilee and the Jezreel Valley, northwest of present-day Afulah, near Simonias (see below, note 11); see Press, Topographical-Historical Encyclopaedia, II, 380; S. Klein, R. Simeon Sofer of Tarbanat, 9699; idem, Galilee, 110; Avi-Yonah, Gazetteer, 99, 108; Reeg, Ortsnamen, 27879. Other identications include Tarichaeae (I. H. Horowitz, Palestine and the Adjacent Countries, I, 305) and Trachonitis (M. B. Schwartz, Torah-Reading, 288). 9. Alternatively: so that they [i.e., our children] may recite this material to us. 10. Y Megillah 4, 5, 75b. The translation follows the traditional commentators. Sokolo (Dictionary, 488), on the other hand, suggests that the reference here is specically to the reading of the Decalogue. 11. Simonias: located in the southwestern sector of the Lower Galilee, on the edge of the Jezreel Valley, west of Afulah. See Neubauer, Gographie, 189; Mller and Schmitt, Siedlungen Palstinas, 17475; Reeg, Ortsnamen, 45657 and bibliography therein. See also Z. Safrai, Pirqei Galilee, 5557. Bostra: Bowersock, Roman Arabia, passim; Kindler, Coinage of Bostra, 611. 12. Y Yevamot 12, 6, 13a; Genesis Rabbah 81, 2 (pp. 96972). 13. Y Sheviit 6, 1, 36d; Deuteronomy Rabbah, Vaetanan (p. 60). One can thus understand the irritationif not outright angerfelt by the community of Cilicia, who saw their synagogue ocials dismissed by the Patriarchs emissary, Joseph, in the early fourth century; see Epiphanius, Panarion 30, 11, 4.
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ing his reservations regarding this edice complex: How many souls have your ancestors lost here [by the wrong prioritization of values]? There is no one studying Torah! 14 Public buildings and their functionaries were often a cause of rivalry between neighboring communities, and at times envy motivated one to imitate and even outdo the achievements of the other. Although clearly articulated only in a late midrash, such competition between communities is so well documented for the Roman world generally and the Galilee in particular as to imbue this source with a substantial degree of credibility. [Regarding] a small town in Israel, they [the townspeople] built for themselves a synagogue and academy and hired a sage and instructors for their children. When a nearby town saw [this], it [also] built a synagogue and academy, and likewise hired teachers for their children. 15 The local community was also responsible for the synagogues ongoing maintenance. Salaries were undoubtedly a major expense. Some synagogue expenses were covered by wealthy laymen or by ocials such as the archisynagogue, presbyter, and archon. In all probability, these people as well as the ten batlanim (whatever their function) were not remunerated for their services.16 Many individual participants in synagogue worship, such as prayer leaders, Torah readers, liturgical poets, and preachers, may have performed these services gratis or with the help of minor contributions, but of this we cannot be certain. Nevertheless, other functionariesteachers ( ,)azzanim, shamashim, and meturgemanimclearly received compensation, no matter how minimal.17 Construction or repair of the synagogue building was likewise a communal responsibility. The Tosefta makes it patently clear that the community at large could obligate its members in this regard: Members of a town [can] force one another[ ]to build themselves a synagogue and to purchase a Torah scroll and [books of the] Prophets. 18 For this period we are fortunate to have a number of epigraphical sources that contribute immensely to an appreciation of this communal dimension. Almost all relevant epi14. Y Sheqalim 5, 6, 49b; Y Peah 8, 9, 21b. On Lod and its Jewish community in this period, see J. J. Schwartz, Lod ( Lydda), 10120. 15. Seder Eliyahu Rabbah 11 (pp. 5455). Rivalry between neighboring cities is attested in Josephus, Life 3539; Lamentations Rabbah 1, 17 (p. 46a). 16. See below, Chap. 11. 17. See, for example, B Shabbat 56a; Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 21:1 (p. 454). For one of the rare references to a shamash, see Y Maaser Sheni 5, 2, 56a. See also Targum Pseudo-Jonathan of Gen. 25:27, referring to Jacob functioning in such a capacity in a school. An inscription from the Bet Shearim synagogue may indeed refer to such a position; see Schwabe and Lifshitz, Beth Shearim, II, no. 205; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 141. On the ( guard) in a bet midrash setting, see B Yoma 35b (= Yalqut Shimoni, Genesis, 145 [p. 753]). See also below, note 83. 18. T Bava Metzia 11, 23 (p. 125); and Lieberman, TK, IX, 32021. For a suggestion that a communal eort on the part of Sardis Jewry was responsible for the acquisition and remodeling of the local synagogue in the third and fourth centuries, see Bonz, Diering Approaches to Religious Benefaction, 139 54.
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graphical evidence stems from Byzantine Palestine.19 Many of these inscriptions clearly attest to cases in which the community as a whole was acknowledged for its donations to and support of the synagogue. All this, it should be noted, stands in sharp contrast to the mode of church building in Byzantine Palestine, where very often church authorities (bishop, deacon, or others) were regularly named.20 Jericho:
May they be remembered for good. May their memory be for good, the entire holy congregation, the old and the young, whom the King of the Universe has helped, for they have contributed to and made this mosaic.21
Bet Shean:
May they be remembered for good, all members of this holy association, who have supported the repair of the holy place and its well-being. May they be blessed. Amen . . . in great kindness and peace.22
Sometimes an inscription was intended not only to thank and bless members for past good deeds, but also to encourage them to do so in the future: ammat Tiberias:
May peace be with all those who have contributed in this holy place, and who will continue to give charity in the future. May that person be blessed. Amen, Amen, Selah. And to me, Amen.23
Almost without exception, these communal inscriptions were written in Aramaic, while individual wealthy donors were noted almost exclusively in Greek.24 Notable exceptions to this rule have been found at Naaran and ammat Gader, where Aramaic inscriptions cite individual donors, and at Caesarea, where a Greek inscription refers to the community at large.25
19. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, 46. 20. Campagnano-Di Segni, Involvement, 31217. 21. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 69; Sokolo, Dictionary, 95. Additional examples may be found at Susiya, especially useifa on the Carmel, and perhaps ammat Tiberias. See Naveh, op. cit., nos. 76, 39, and 24, respectively. 22. Ibid., no. 46, and comments, p. 10. 23. Ibid., no. 26. Cf. a similar formulation from the Naaran synagogue; ibid., no. 64. 24. On this and other distinctions between the Aramaic and Greek inscriptions, see Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 14752. The ammat Tiberias synagogue provides us with an example of this contrast. Whereas the above-quoted Aramaic inscription thanks the entire congregation of this holy place, a Greek inscription acknowledges a prominent individual for his contribution to this holy place: May Profutoros the mizoteros [the exact meaning of this term is unclear, but it is probably the title of an ocial] be remembered for good and for blessing, he who made this stoa of the holy place. May he be blessed. Amen. Shalom (ibid., no. 17 and p. 169). The one Greek inscription referring to the contribution of the people at large comes from Caesarea. 25. Ibid., no. 25.
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On occasion, an inscription oers a general blessing for the entire community: Jericho:
May He who knows their names, [as well as] their childrens and members of their households, write them in the Book of Life together with all the righteous. All the people of Israel are brethren [ .]Peace. Amen.26
In some places, synagogue inscriptions indicate matters of primary concern to the entire congregation. The halakhic orientation and focus of the Reov community, for example, are reected in its synagogues inscriptions. Preliminary notices of as yet unpublished remains indicate that fragmentary blessings and prayers were written on the buildings walls and columns. The monumental halakhic inscription placed near the entrance to the synagogues main halla detailed itemization of foods forbidden on the Sabbatical year and a delineation of the boundaries of Jewish Palestine within which such laws appliedis a powerful statement by the community of the importance it attached to the observance of Sabbatical-year laws.27 A second example of an inscription dealing with the particular concerns of a community is found at En Gedi (g. 83). Located in the western aisle of the hall and written in Aramaic, the inscription addresses a number of important communal issues: he who causes dissension within the community, or speaks slanderously about his friend to the gentiles, or steals something from his friend, or reveals the secret of the community to the gentilesHe, whose eyes observe the entire world and who sees hidden things, will turn His face to this fellow and his ospring and will uproot them from under the heavens. And all the people said: Amen, Amen, Selah. 28 Thus, the En Gedi community spelled out on the synagogue oor, for all to see and ponder, the kinds of behavior it found objectionable. The exact nature of the communitys secret remains unknown. Theories abound, from the political and economic to the communal and religious, yet the secret remains hidden to this day.29 Here, as in the above examples, synagogue inscriptions were a main vehicle for expressing communal concerns and interests.30 Congregational donations were necessary for covering the expenses of the institution, although sometimes they were far from sucient. Larger individual donations were often required, and we are well informed about such contributions from the epigraphical evidence. Synagogue inscriptions mention numerous individuals who made dona26. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 69. On the expression , see Y agigah 3, 6, 79d. 27. Sussmann, Inscription, 14653. 28. L. Levine, Inscription in the En Gedi Synagogue, 14045. For a full bibliography regarding this inscription, see Tabory, Bibliography of the Ancient Synagogue, 40. 29. For a summary of the various interpretations of the secret of the community, see L. Levine, Inscription in the En Gedi Synagogue, 14045. 30. For other examples of a synagogue inscription that served as a pronouncement of communal decisions, see below.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
tions for various parts of synagogue buildings:31 lintels (Baram, Alma, ammat Tiberias, Kokhav Hayarden), columns (Dabbura, Khirbet Yitzaqia, Bet Guvrin, Capernaum), portals (Rama, Dabbura, Ibilin), fountains or water basins (Philadelphia in Lydia, and Sidboth in Asia Minor), a stoa or porticoes (Caesarea, ammat Tiberias, Chorazim, Athribis, Xenephyris in Egypt, Phocaea), stairs (Chorazim), a Torah ark (Ostia, orvat Ammudim), perhaps a Torah shrine (Naveh), wall revetments and paintings (Tralles in Caria, Acmonia, Syracuse), chancel screens (Smyrna), mosaic oors or parts thereof (Sepphoris, Caesarea, orvat Ammudim, Apamea, ammat Gader, Bet Shean, Maon [Nirim], Jericho, Susiya, Gaza, Smyrna, Emesa), a marble pavement (Sid), a platform (Tralles), a vestibule (Mantinea), additional rooms, including a triclinium ( Jerusalem, Caesarea, Naro, Stobi), a roof (Acmonia), and, nally, a bima and lampstand (Pergamum). In some cases, one or more wealthy individuals in the congregation bore the entire ex-
31. The following list is based on the epigraphical collections of Frey, Lifshitz, Naveh, and RothGerson. On the issue of euergetism in Late Antiquity, see the cautious remarks of Rogers, Gift and Society, 18899.
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pense of constructing the building, as seems to have been the case in Jerusalem, Dura, Taphos (Syria), Teos, Phocaea, and Golgoi (Cyprus). At times, a community was spared much of the burden of building and maintaining the synagogue if it was part of a wealthy individuals house or building complex. This may have been the case with the Leontis complex in Bet Shean.32 Alternatively, a wealthy person might donate the ground oor of a building for use by the community, which would then bear the maintenance expenses. Such seems to have been the arrangement between Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos and the Stobi community.33 In fact, the talmudic reference to a synagogue of an individual ( ) may refer to this phenomenon.34 Rabbinic sources, too, have preserved a series of references to synagogue gifts. On several occasions, specic individuals are mentioned, such as the emperor Antoninus who reputedly contributed a menorah, and an Arab merchant (?), es-Shazrak, who donated a lamp or a lantern.35 Luke notes a Roman centurion who built a synagogue in Capernaum,36 and mention is made of individual contributions involving a Torah chest and mantles, a menorah and candles, as well as a beam donated by a gentile.37 It is dicult to say whether some of the above are indeed historical instances or ctitious examples invoked as part of a theoretical halakhic discussion. Judging by the epigraphical remains, it would seem that wealthy and acculturated community members were responsible for the physical appearance of the synagogues in ammat Tiberias, Sepphoris, Caesarea, Bet Shean, and other cities.38 Greek was the predominant language used in these places, as were the Greek names of the benefactors.39 Even the related artistic motifs are best explained as reecting the tastes and cultural proclivities (and perhaps religious tendencies) of the upper classes.40 Not only was this stratum of society in large part responsible for most urban synagogue buildings known to date, but it is more than likely that these people may also have had a decisive say in synagogue aairs in such communities.
32. Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 176. 33. Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 159.; see above, Chap. 8. 34. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. See also T Megillah 2, 17 (p. 352); and, for a specic example of this phenomenon, B Megillah 26a. 35. Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a; B Arakhin 6b. Antoninus is generally identied with Caracalla (211217 c.e.); see Alon, Jews in Their Land, II, 682; Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 3942; L. Levine, Age of R. Judah I, 98100; Oppenheimer, Galilee, 6366. See also M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 62627. 36. Luke 7:5. 37. T Megillah 2, 1316 (pp. 35152). See also B Arakhin 6b. 38. See Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, passim. 39. A corrective to Roth-Gersons theory that this practice was basically linguistic, i.e., in Greek as against Semitic inscriptions, is that it may also be related to the urban-rural dichotomy. In truth, the correlation of Greek inscriptions to urban settings is predictably quite high. See ibid., 14762; and idem, Similarities and Dierences, 13346; as well as below, Chap. 11. 40. See J. Baumgarten, Art in the Synagogue, 2046; L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 17881.
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Communal control of the synagogue is undoubtedly a crucial factor in explaining the wide diversity among synagogue buildings. Varying sizes and shapes are, of course, to be expected and are directly related to the size and wealth of a community and to the physical location of the building. However, the shape and plan of a building are the function of other factors as well, such as local or regional traditions,41 or the desire to create a certain type of worship experience. While this last consideration is dicult to substantiate, it is equally hard to imagine that two synagogues (e.g., Meiron and Khirbet Shema), built at the same time and place but according to two very dierent models, might not represent, inter alia, dierent notions of what a prayer hall should look like, how it should function, and what sort of ambience ought to be created therein. Similar thoughts arise when comparing two very disparate third-century Diaspora buildings, Sardis in the west and Dura Europos in the east. At these two sites, it is clear that the general social and cultural matrix of each of these communities constituted a powerful inuence in determining the character and interior arrangement of the buildings. As noted above,42 artistic tastes among various communities diered signicantly, and this is clearly reected in their preferences for the types of decorations (geometric, oral, gural), designs, and motifs used by each. Did they depict Jewish symbols? If so, which? And where were they placed? Are biblical scenes or gures represented, or was the popular zodiac motif with Helios placed in the center? Or were both of these elements placed side by side, as at Bet Alpha and Sepphoris? Were the choices of these communities based on economic considerations, aesthetic appeal, or religious proclivities? Whatever the case, ultimately each community shaped its own synagogue, and even where certain regional models existed (as, for example, with respect to the architecture of the Galileantype synagogue), there still remained a wide range of choices in the process of adoption and implementation.43 Epigraphical evidence, as already noted, attests to the fact that matters of fundamental concern to communities might nd expression in prominently placed inscriptions in the synagogue buildings.44 The agreement between Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos and the Stobi community over the use of the synagogue building was inscribed on a column; the halakhic rules of the sabbatical year were set down in a mosaic oor located just inside the main entrance of the Reov synagogue and again on one of its columns; and injunctions relating to the En Gedi community, along with the curses to be invoked if
41. As is the case in the Golan, where synagogues are oriented either to the south or west, or in southern Judea, where the entrances to synagogues face east, in imitation of the Temple. See T Megillah 3, 22 (p. 360). 42. See above, Chaps. 7 and 8. 43. Compare, for example, the ornamentation at Capernaum and Chorazim on the one hand and Meiron and Baram on the other. 44. See below, Chap. 9.
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the injunctions were ignored, were spelled out in a mosaic inscription prominently placed at the entrance of the synagogue building.45 With rare exception,46 there is no evidence to suggest that anyone besides the local community determined the nature of the local synagogue. Generally speaking, neither at the time of the Second Temple nor afterward do we have any hint of an oce, person, or institution exercising such authority. At times, the sages suggested certain practices, but the nal decision to implement them in a given community was rarely, if ever, in their hands.47
INSTITUTIONAL FUNCTIONS
The destruction of the Temple in 70 had little eect on the synagogues range of activities.48 Like many pagan temples and churches in Late Antiquity, the synagogue functioned as the focal communal institution within the Jewish community.49 Relative to the pre-70 era, we are much better informed about Late Antiquity, owing largely to the abundance of information culled from rabbinic literature and archaeological data. Although the material preserved in rabbinic sources is rather uneven, with references to primary schools far outweighing references to other functions, there is nevertheless enough material in these sources to clearly indicate the wide variety of activities that might have taken place in any given synagogue. The needs of each community were many; on several occasions, rabbinic sources list those institutions or functions considered essential to communal life: A sage may not live in a town that does not have ten things. They are: a penal court [ ,] a charity fund collected by two and distributed by three, a synagogue, a bathhouse, a privy, a doctor, a blood letter, a scribe, a butcher, and a teacher of children. 50 While this tradition appears to dierentiate between the synagogue and other communal services, there can be little question that many of them took place in the
45. Stobi: Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 145. Reov: Vitto, Synagogue at Reob, 9094. En Gedi: L. Levine, Inscription in the En Gedi Synagogue, 14045. 46. The Theodosian Code and Epiphanius Panarion mentions the Patriarchs involvement in setting synagogue policy and appointing synagogue ocials in the fourth-century c.e. Diaspora. See below, Chap. 12. 47. See below, Chap. 13. 48. For the functions of the pre-70 synagogue, see above, Chap. 5. Though mention will be made from time to time of earlier material, the focus of this chapter is Late Antiquity. 49. MacMullen, Paganism, 1012, 3442; Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, II, 28086; S. Safrai, Synagogue, 94244; and esp. Z. Safrai, Communal Functions, 181204. The synagogue continued to function as the center of communal activities in the Middle Ages as well; see Goitein, Mediterranean Society, II, 15570; Assis, Synagogues in Medieval Spain, 2326; M. Ben Sasson, Appeal, 32731. 50. B Sanhedrin 17b. See also Y Qiddushin 4, 12, 66b; Pirqei Derekh Eretz 1 (in Seder Eliyahu Zuta 1 [p. 13]).
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synagogue. Witness, for example, the sources referred to above which describe the tasks of a synagogue appointee; such a person was to function as a preacher, judge, azzan, teacher, and one who does everything else for us. 51 Let us review the evidence for the various activities that are attested for the synagogues of Late Antiquity.
Meeting Place
The locus classicus for the synagogue as a forum for discussing community issues is, of course, Josephus account of the deliberations in the Tiberias proseuche over whether or not to join the revolt in 6667.52 Another kind of meeting in the synagogue occurred in the early second century in Lydda. Bones from the nearby village of Kefar Tavi 53 were brought into the synagogue to determine whether they were pure or impure. As a decision in this matter depended on whether they belonged to one or more bodies, a number of doctors convened there to render an opinion.54 The third-century R. Yoanan, as quoted by R. Jacob b. Idi, is quite explicit in his claim that communal matters should be discussed in the synagogue, even on the Sabbath: We determine matters of life and death and matters of common concern on the Sabbath, and we go to the synagogue to determine matters of public concern on the Sabbath. 55 At times communal issues were discussed via the sermon delivered in the synagogue on the Sabbath. The question was posed by the preacher, at times forcefully and in a transparently tendentious way, at times engendering extreme responses of either enthusiastic support or heated opposition. Since the traditions preserved in this regard are found in rabbinic sources, it is only natural that the spokespersons mentioned are rabbis or those closely identied with them, and that the issues discussed involved the sages. In one instance, Jacob of Kefar Nevoraya delivered a homily at the Caesarean Maradata synagogue, inveighing against the wealthy (and indirectly against the Patriarch who appointed them) as unacceptable choices for judicial posts. Not unexpectedly, his words were enthusiastically received ( )by the sages present.56 In another instance, this time at the Maon synagogue near Tiberias, Yosi of Maon castigated the Patriarch (Nasi) in a public sermon because of a taxation policy that eectively reduced any support the sages might have expected to receive from the people. The Patriarchs angry reaction to this harangue was predictable; Yosi ed the city in fear of a reprisal, and rabbinic mediation was forthcoming to resolve the crisis.57 It is impossible
51. See above, notes 12 and 13. 52. See above, Chap. 3. 53. On the location of this village east of Lydda, see T Maaser Sheni 5, 16 (p. 271); Neeman, Encyclopedia, II, 44. 54. T Oholot 4, 2 (p. 600); Y Berakhot 1, 2, 3a; B Nazir 52a. See also Ginzberg, Commentary, I, 8687. 55. B Shabbat 150a; see also B Ketubot 5a, with some variations. 56. Midrash on Samuel 7, 10 (p. 34b); Y Bikkurim 3, 3, 65d. 57. Y Sanhedrin 2, 6, 20cd; Genesis Rabbah 80, 1 (pp. 95053). Resh Laqish also delivered a harsh
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to assess how common this type of incident was; nevertheless, it is signicant that such political issues were raised within the synagogue setting.58 We have already noted at least one rabbinic tradition that places the Palestinian synagogue as the mise-en-scne for the discussion of serious communal matters. Following the Bar-Kokhba revolt and subsequent persecutions, an attempt was made by ananiah, nephew of R. Joshua b. anania, to assert Babylonian religious supremacy over Palestine by announcing calendrical decisions there (i.e., New Moons and leap years). The challenge was met by the Patriarch Rabban Simeon b. Gamaliel, who reportedly dispatched two Palestinian sages to Babylonia.59 According to the Babylonian tradition, the public confrontation between these Palestinian representatives and anania took place in the academy, while in the Palestinian account the setting was the synagogue following the Torah reading on the Sabbath, with the community in attendance. The historical veracity of these accounts is dicult to ascertain but is not of concern to us here; what is of interest is the venue depicted in each tradition. For those living in Palestine, the synagogue was the natural and recognized setting for this sort of confrontation.60 Moreover, as we have seen, various professional and social groups held regular meetings in the synagogue in the pre-70 period.61 The inscription from Aphrodisias attests to the existence of a society (dekany) composed of those devoted to study and prayer who helped those in need; undoubtedly, these people were aliated in some way with the local synagogue and their activities most probably were held there.62 Instances are noted of rabbis who gathered for study in or near synagogues,63 although generally they seem to have preferred their academies. Communal decisions were invariably carried out in a synagogue setting. Not only were
attack on the Nasi that likewise evoked a sharp response. However, it is not stated in what context this statement was made; see Y Sanhedrin 2, 1, 19d20a; Y Horayot 3, 2, 47a; Midrash on Samuel 7, 5 (p. 34b). See also B Taanit 24a; as well as the remarks in Herr, Synagogues and Theatres, 10519. 58. Interestingly, in matters of life and death or in discussions of important political issues (presumably involving Jews), some sages permitted attendance in theaters and stadiums, where such decisions were being made. See T Avodah Zarah 2, 7 (p. 462); B Shabbat 150a; B Ketubot 5a. 59. Y Sanhedrin 1, 2, 19a; Y Nedarim 6, 40a; B Berakhot 63ab. 60. Gafni, Jews of Babylonia, 113. 61. See above, Chaps. 4 and 5. For example, burial and other societies may have met there, as was common in pagan and Christian settings of Late Antiquity; see, for example, Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 138; C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 75.; Av. Cameron, Later Roman Empire, 12627; Herrin, Ideals of Charity, 15164. See also Malherbe, Social Aspects, 94.; Meeks, First Urban Christians, 109. 62. Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 2838. See also Rajak, Jewish Community, 2021. An inscription found in the Bet Shearim synagogue reads as follows: Of R. Samuel, who wraps [in shrouds?] and Judah who lays to rest; see Schwabe and Lifshitz, Bet Shearim, II, 18990. That such functionaries existed is not surprising, surely not in a major necropolis such as Bet Shearim. It is possible that meetings pertaining to their work were held in this local synagogue. 63. See, for example, Genesis Rabbah 33, 3 (p. 305).
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declarations of the Cyrenian community to honor certain individuals made in gatherings at the synagogue, but a stele honoring these people was erected on the premises.64 Similarly, epigraphical evidence from several Crimean synagogues refers to a public declaration of manumission being made in a synagogue setting, and in a number of cases the actual involvement of the congregation as a signatory is explicitly stated.65 Evidence regarding meals in synagogues has accumulated over the years, conrming that such gatherings were a widespread feature of synagogue life in Late Antiquity. What blurred the issue at rst was an oft-quoted rabbinic prohibition: There is to be no eating, drinking, or sleeping in the synagogue. 66 Other sources as well appear to make a very clear distinction (perhaps polemically) between attending the synagogue on the one hand and eating and drinking there on the other.67 But even here, rabbinic sources themselves appear to oer contradictory evidence. It is clearly stated that either religious associations ( ) or the community at large held festive meals on synagogue premises.68 Moreover, as noted above, guests staying at the synagogue hostel would obviously eat, drink, and sleep there, with rabbinic acquiescence.69 A number of traditions tell of rabbis as well as priests who ate in the synagogue, and of additions to the grace after meals that were made on their behalf.70 One tradition speaks of a company of servants who would dine each Friday evening in the synagogue.71 Meals were also held there just prior to a public fast. Before the Ninth of Av, the day marking the destruction of the two Temples, there appears to have been a custom among some Jews to eat (even to excess) in synagogues and academies and then proceed to recite the book of Lamentations and principal dirges prescribed for the occasion.72 The ubiquitousness of such meals during the year necessitated a careful search for leaven in synagogues before the Passover holiday.73 Archaeological evidence in this regard, though limited, is likewise unequivocal. A Jew64. See above, Chap. 4. 65. Levinskaya, Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 23142. 66. T Megillah 2, 18 (p. 353); B Megillah 28ab; and above, Chap. 6. 67. PRK 28, 1 (p. 423); Seder Eliyahu Rabbah 1 (p. 4). 68. Y Moed Qatan 2, 3, 81b; Y Sanhedrin 8, 2, 26ab. Moreover, rabbinic sources make it eminently clear that academies as well may have had such dining areas, referred to as ;see Y Shabbat 20, 1, 17c; and comments in J. N. Epstein, Studies in Talmudic Literature, II/2, 87071; Lieberman, Hayerushalmi Kiphshuto, 213; idem, Studies in Palestinian Talmudic Literature, 214; Meitlis, Signicance of the Revua, 46566. 69. B Pesaim 100b101a. 70. Y Berakhot 2, 8, 5d, where it is stated that sages ate in the upper chamber, or balcony ( ,)of a synagogue; cf. Ginzberg, Commentary, I, 41213. On priests eating in the synagogue, see Y Berakhot 3, 1, 6a; Y Nazir 7, 1, 56a. 71. Genesis Rabbah 65, 15 (pp. 72829); Sokolo, Dictionary, 447. J. Epstein (Linguistic Tidbits, 105) has suggested that the term refers to shermen. 72. Lamentations Rabbah, Proem 17 (p. 14). 73. Y Pesaim 1, 1, 27b.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
ish dining club, in all likelihood functioning in a proseuche setting, is known from Hellenistic Egypt.74 Inscriptions from synagogues at Caesarea, Qatzrin (in the Golan), and Stobi record the presence of a triclinium or revua (g. 84);75 the building at Ostia had a kitchen and triclinium on its premises, with an adjoining hall that may have been used, inter alia, for banqueting.76 Finally, an inscription from Susiya in southern Judaea tells of a major donation to the local synagogue that was made at a banquet, quite possibly held on the synagogue premises.77 The above-noted evidence makes it rather clear that meals were a familiar feature of ancient synagogue life. This was true of the Diaspora as well as Palestine, and throughout all of Late Antiquity. Chrysostom, too, seems to have referred to such repasts in fourthcentury Antioch when taking note of synagogues with their table of demons. 78 There are several possible interpretations regarding the rabbinic statements noted above that prohibited such activity in the synagogue. These declarations either opposed prevalent practices (apparently unsuccessfully), reect an earlier period (i.e., tannaitic), or were intended to prohibit eating in specic areas within the synagogue building, such as the prayer hall. However, there is no indication of such specicity in these statements,
74. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, no. 139. 75. Caesarea: Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 11517. Qatzrin: Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, 147; Urman, Jewish Inscriptions, 53334; idem, Public Structures, 46973. Stobi: Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 16569. On the term in Nabatean contexts, see Urman, Jewish Inscriptions, 534 35. 76. Squarciapino, Synagogue of Ostia, 24; Fine and Della Pergola, Synagogue of Ostia, 43, 45; White, Building Gods House, 69; Runesson, Synagogue at Ancient Ostia, 76. On dining facilities in pagan and Christian contexts, see ibid., 4041, 109, 122. 77. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 75, 11516. Perhaps relevant to this context is the parchment fragment discovered in the streetll near the Dura synagogue containing a Hebrew text of birkat hamazon (the grace after meals). Whether this text was used for synagogue meals or for instruction in a local school (or perhaps for some other purpose) remains unknown. See Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 259. 78. Homily 1 (PG 48, 854).
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and the rabbinic prohibition in the Tosefta passage is absolute and unreserved. Thus, one of the former alternatives appears more likely.
Court
The right of adjudication was of paramount importance to every Jewish community because it provided the basis for communal discipline and self-regulation. The synagogue venue of these proceedings is already attested for the Diaspora in several edicts relating to the rst-century b.c.e. Sardis community.79 In one of the edicts, the place of adjudication referred to is clearly the local proseuche. The holding of court proceedings within the synagogue in Judaea in the rst century c.e. is conrmed by a number of New Testament references.80 With regard to Late Antiquity, both Epiphanius and rabbinic literature note that the synagogue served as a place for administering punishment, particularly ogging, and that the azzan was the ocial who carried this out.81 A later source interprets the titles judges and ocers in Deut. 16:18 as referring to judges and azzanim,82 and Exod. 21:1 refers to the judges responsibility for the salaries of the azzanim.83 The Yerushalmi states that R. Abbahu was the sole judge (and not part of the usual tribunal of three) in a court gathering convened in the Maradata synagogue of Caesarea.84 The status and authority of Jewish communal courts, many, if not most, of which met in the synagogue of Late Antiquity, is dicult to assess, especially after 212, when Jews throughout the Empire were granted Roman citizenship.85 In fact, the authority of these synagogue-based courts may have been anchored in moral, religious, and social suasion alone, which in village settings and even in urban communities was undoubtedly a powerful force. In many cities, particularly in Palestine, a number of court settings of the municipal, rabbinic, Patriarchal, and Roman variety were available to Jews,86 but we do not know which of these courts met in the synagogue. The Roman courts certainly did not, but those involving rabbinic participation sometimes did.87 The lack of a binding authority in many of these judicial settings is reected in an account of Tamar, whose case
79. Antiquities 14, 235 and 260. This right was more fully spelled out in the latter edict (260), although it is implicit in the former (235) as well. 80. Matt. 10:7; Acts 22:19. 81. Epiphanius, Panarion 30, 11; M Makkot 3, 12. 82. Midrash Hagadol, Deuteronomy 16:18 (p. 371). 83. Ibid., Exodus 21:1 (p. 454); and, indirectly, B Shabbat 56a. 84. Y Sanhedrin 1, 1, 18a. Cf. also Y Bikkurim 1, 4, 64a. 85. Juster, Les Juifs, II, 149.; Goodman, State and Society, 15571. 86. Alon, Jews, Judaism and the Classical World, 385. Gafni has suggested that a rather unique situation existed in Sassanian Babylonia, i.e., that many court proceedings seem to have taken place in rabbinic academies; see his Court Cases, 2340. 87. On rabbis adjudicating in synagogues, see below, Chap. 13.
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was adjudicated by three Tiberian rabbis. Dissatised with their decision, Tamar appealed to the Roman court in Caesarea. The three rabbis then approached their Caesarean colleague, R. Abbahu, to intercede, hoping to have the case dismissed or the appeal rejected. However, R. Abbahu failed in his eorts to persuade Tamar to agree.88 The undermining eects on the Jewish court system of such appeals to Roman authorities can well be imagined. Another kind of legal procedure that may have been held on synagogue premises involved the manumission of slaves. Such declarations, as noted above, are recorded for the communities of rst-century c.e. Bosphorus.89
Charity
Both Jewish and non-Jewish sources attest to the fact that the Jewish communities of Late Antiquity had spawned a rather highly developed social welfare system. Rabbinic literature contains a plethora of traditions indicating a range of charities for the needy, the existence of ocials charged with such responsibilities, and a system of taxation for such purposes.90 The emperor Julian likewise took note of the Jewish communitys care for its own. In complaining about pagan societys lack of attention to its needy, he stated: For it is disgraceful that, when no Jew ever has to beg, and the impious Galileans [i.e., Christians] support not only their own poor but ours as well, all men see that our people lack aid from us. 91 Charity was pledged and then given within the synagogue setting, and the former was often (if not regularly) carried out on the Sabbath. Various sources note this already in the rst century, and even though some rabbis may have had reservations in this regard, by Late Antiquity it had become a well-accepted practice.92 The primary donation was aid for the poor (food and clothing), although there was also a matter of community dues, such as teachers salaries.93 It appears that these communal funds, in many cases at least, were kept on synagogue
88. Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a. 89. See above, note 65; and Chap. 4. 90. See, inter alia, M Peah 8, 7; T Peah 4, 821 (pp. 5761); T Demai 3, 1617 (pp. 7778); Y Peah 8, 7, 21a; Y Demai 3, 1, 23b; Y Bava Batra 1, 6, 12d; B Bava Batra 8a11a. See also Baron, Jewish Community, I, 13132; L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 16267; Z. Safrai, Jewish Community, 6276. 91. Julian, Epistle 22, 430D. See also Bird, Comparative Study of Charity, 529. While largely accurate, such care was not always forthcoming from the Jewish community, as is attested by a number of second-century Roman writers; see M. Stern, GLAJJ, I, no. 246; II, nos. 299, 395. On charity within the Byzantine church, see Herrin, Ideals of Charity, 15164. 92. First century: Matt. 6:2; T Shabbat 16, 22 (p. 79); and above, Chap. 5. Rabbinic reservations: T Shabbat, 16, 22 (p. 79); T Terumot 1, 10 (p. 109) and parallels; and comments in Lieberman, TK, I, 300301, with respect to guardians donating the monies of orphans on the Sabbath. Accepted activities: B Shabbat 150a; B Ketubot 5a, where a synagogue venue is undoubtedly intended. 93. M Peah 8, 78; T Peah 4, 9 (p. 57); Y Peah 8, 7, 21a.
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premises.94 In a number of excavations, large caches or hoards of coins were recovered, which were probably designated, at least in part, for such purposes.95 The sacred funds kept by Jews of Asia Minor in their synagogue halls or banquet rooms also may have been intended for charitable purposes, although some, if not most, of these funds may have been intended for the Jerusalem Temple in the pre-70 period.96 The sacred funds referred to in the third-century Stobi inscription, however, were undoubtedly earmarked for local purposes, either the synagogue building, synagogue activities, or other charitable causes.97 Rabbinic sources focus on the distribution of food to the needy, noting both a weekly allocation referred to as kuppah (lit., a charity box) and a daily one called tamui (lit., a charity plate).98 Those who did not have enough food for two meals a day could take advantage of the tamui, which functioned as a public soup kitchen; those who did not have provisions for fourteen meals a week could avail themselves of the kuppah.99 Collection for the latter was supervised by at least two people and distributed by at least three. Special arrangements were made for homeless indigents.100 In addition to food, clothing was donated and monies were collected for orphans, captives, burial of the poor, and perhaps support of sages.101 As noted, the Aphrodisias inscription relates directly to the issue at hand, and the dekany noted therein seems to have been responsible for the maintenance of a patella, generally interpreted as a soup kitchen.102 Then, as now, those known for their charitable benefactions were accorded special honors. They may have occupied special seats, as appears to have been the case at the Maon synagogue.103 Other techniques as well were utilized for raising funds. A wealthy
94. On communal funds deposited earlier in the Jerusalem Temple, see M Sheqalim 34; Josephus, War 2, 175; I Macc. 1, 2124; II Macc. 5, 21. On pagan temples serving in such a capacity, see Thucydides, Peloponnesian War 1, 141; Stambaugh, Functions of Roman Temples, 586. 95. So, for example, ammat Tiberiassee Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, 6466; Bet Alphasee Sukenik, Ancient Synagogues, 13; Merotsee Kindler, Coins of the Synagogues Treasury, 11826, and bibliography on pp. 12122; Z. Ilan, Coins of the Excavation, 12730; Chorazimsee Ariel, Coins from the Synagogue at Korazim, 33*49*; Caesareasee NEAEHL, I, 279; Bet Shearimibid., I, 239. To date, some fourteen caches have been found in synagogue remains from Roman-Byzantine Palestine. 96. Antiquities 16, 164. 97. See above, Chap. 8; and the Acmonia inscription, in White, Social Origins, 30910. 98. T Peah 4, 9 (p. 57) and parallels. See also Lieberman, TK, I, 184. 99. M Peah 8, 7. 100. Ibid. 101. Baron, Jewish Community, I, 13132. In the Arbel synagogue, recent excavations have uncovered what had been interpreted as the community kuppah, so placed as to allow for individual donations to be made from outside the building (Z. Ilan, Ancient Synagogues, 117). 102. On patella (a dish or plate on which food is served up), see Lewis and Short, Latin Dictionary, 1312. See also above, note 62. 103. Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a. From a bet midrash context, we learn of a major donor who was seated next
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Bostran named Abun donated funds to charity, but only after the members of his congregation had made their pledges.104 In another instance, R. Berekhia made a special appeal for funds for a poor itinerant immediately following his sermon; however, it is unclear whether this was in a synagogue or academy setting.105 At times, charity ocials did not limit their activity to synagogue premises, and we learn that on one occasion they solicited a potential contributor in the marketplace for a donation to help an orphan.106
Place of Study
As has been spelled out above, the synagogue, from its earliest days, was a place for Torah study. At rst, such study was conducted primarily within a liturgical context in conjunction with the regular Torah and haftarah readings. The Theodotos inscription may suggest that by the end of the Second Temple period, study within the synagogue also took place independently of the liturgical framework.107 Moreover, if communal schools were already in existence in this early period (see below), then they probably occupied synagogue premises.108 The development of an educational system within the Jewish community is shrouded in mystery. There were schools for the training of priests, scribes, and sages (i.e., wisdom schools) and, of course, the rigorous study programs associated with several religious sects, but nothing is known about educational frameworks for the public at large before the latter Second Temple period.109 Often rabbinic sources retroject contemporary institutions and practices to biblical times. However, with respect to the matter at hand, several traditions date the development of some sort of a school system in Roman Judaea to the days of Simeon b. Shata (rst century b.c.e.) and the high priest Joshua b. Gamala (rst century c.e.).110
to the leading sage of the institution, in this case R. iyya bar Abba; see Leviticus Rabbah 4, 3 (p. 113); Deuteronomy Rabbah 4, 8 (ed. Mirkin, p. 79); Exodus Rabbah 41, 2. 104. Tanuma, Ki Tissa, 15. 105. Leviticus Rabbah 32, 7 (pp. 75253). See also Y Qiddushin 3, 14, 64c; as well as Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a, with regard to R. elbo in Sepphoris. 106. Leviticus Rabbah 37, 2 (pp. 85658). 107. Cf. above, Chap. 5. 108. This is clearly reected in numerous rabbinic traditions that speak of schools in synagogue buildings. See, for example, Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d, and Y Ketubot 13, 1, 35c (Jerusalem); B Gittin 58a (Betar). Cf. S. Safrai, Education, 94658. 109. See, inter alia, Schrer, History, II, 41720; EJ, VI, cols. 381403. See also Swift, Education in Ancient Israel; S. Greenberg, Jewish Educational Institutions, 125487. 110. Y Ketubot 8, 11, 32c; B Bava Batra 21a. Identifying Joshua b. Gamala and clarifying the historicity and relationship of the above-noted traditions have been the subject of much scholarly discussion. See, for example, Schrer, History, II, 41819; S. Safrai, Education, 94748; Hengel, Judaism and Hellenism, I, 8182; Ebner, Elementary Education, 3850; Aberbach, Jewish Education, 932; Goodblatt, Traditions, 83103; Hezser, Jewish Literacy, 4047.
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There is every reason to believe that the development of an institutionalized educational system within the Jewish community was the product of inuences from the surrounding Hellenistic world no less than internal religious and cultural factors.111 Education was far too common a phenomenon in the Greco-Roman world to be ignored by the Jews. Moreover, in the absence of any evidence for comparable educational institutions earlier in Jewish history, the possible impact of the surrounding Hellenistic context ought to be given due consideration. Nevertheless, whatever stimuli may have been supplied by the non-Jewish milieu, it is clear that the Jewish educational curriculum was signicantly dierent. The subject matter, for example, would have been predominantly, if not exclusively, Jewish in content. Such an emphasis was reinforced in Late Antiquity by the fact that schooling for the young had become in large part a communal responsibility; it was no longer a private concern left in large measure to the initiative and nancial means of each parent, an arrangement typical of Greco-Roman society generally.112 In the post-70 period, synagogue-based educational frameworks had become an integral feature of synagogue life, as is amply reected in rabbinic literature. More specically, it is the education of children on synagogue premises that is often noted in these sources. The importance of this activity in the eyes of the sages nds varied expression. R. Joshuas mother is said to have brought him to the synagogue when he was only a baby, so that he might become accustomed to hearing words of Torah.113 When asked which group is most beloved by God, one sage answered: Those teachers of Bible and Mishnah who have diligently given instruction to children will in the future sit to the right of God. 114 R. Simeon b. Yoai ventured an opinion that towns and villages become desolate because their inhabitants do not pay teachers enough for instructing their children. Finally, a well-known story stresses the importance of teachers (guardians of the city, ) as a crucial element in the life of a city:
R. Judah Nesiah sent R. iyya, R. Asi, and R. Ami to tour the towns of Palestine in order to establish for [or: assign] them teachers of Scriptures and teachers of Oral Law. In one place they found neither teachers of Scriptures nor teachers of Oral Law, whereupon they said to
111. Hengel, Judaism and Hellenism, I, 7883; Rengstorf, in TDNT, IV, 41541. See also Ebner, Elementary Education, 14849; Morris, Jewish School, 37. On primary schools in the Greco-Roman world, see Freeman, Schools of Hellas, 79.; Carcopino, Daily Life, 1037; Bonner, Education in Ancient Rome, 34 46, 115211; T. Morgan, Literate Education, 2533; and, of course, the classic study of Marrou, History of Education. 112. Marrou, History of Education, 199222, 35868. On this type of private arrangement, which seems to have been the norm in Babylonia, see Gafni, Jews of Babylonia, 1079. This may explain why discussions regarding teachers pay are to be found almost exclusively in Palestinian sources. It was there that these issues were public and communal matters, not private ones. See, for example, Y Peah 8, 7, 21a. 113. Y Yevamot 1, 6, 3a. 114. PRK 27, 2 (p. 406).
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them [the residents]: Bring us the guardians of the city. They brought them the sentries of the city. The sages responded: These are not the guardians of the city, but rather its destroyers! And who are its guardians? they [the people] asked. [The sages responded:] The teachers of Scriptures and the teachers of Oral Law. 115
Thus, not only is Israel protected from within by the proper support of teachers and schools, but it is shielded from outside adversaries as well. According to another rabbinic tradition, when asked by the nations of the world how the Jewish people could be overcome, the pagan philosopher Oenomus of Gadara replied: Go and visit their synagogues and academies. If you nd the voices of children chirping [i.e., reciting their lessons] you will not be able to overcome them; if not, you will be able to. 116 The belief that the Divine Presence hovers over schools is likewise reected in the tradition that the bat qol (heavenly voice) communicates via the recitation of childrens lessons in schools.117 Sending children to a school in the synagogue appears to have been widely practiced among Jews.118 As noted, the hiring of a well-known teacher may have served, inter alia, as a source of imitation and envy to others.119 Children learning in synagogue schools on a daily basis made a distinct impression. A number of rabbinic accounts commence by telling of a sage who, passing such a school, heard a verse being recited by a youngster, which, in turn, triggered his own interpretation of the verse. Such occurrences are reported at the Babylonian synagogue in Sepphoris with regard to R. iyya bar Abba in the late third century, R. Tanum bar anilai in the early fourth, and R. aggai of Tiberias in that same century.120 A late ctional account reports that Elisha b. Abuya ( )went from synagogue to synagogue and heard dierent verses recited by children, all reecting aspects of his personal predicament.121 A gentile is reported to have had a similar experience.122 Finally, one account tells of R. Simeon b. Yoai, who passed the
115. Y agigah 1, 7, 76c; Sokolo, Dictionary, 590. See also PRK 15, 5 (p. 253); Lamentations Rabbah, Proem 2 (p. 1b); Midrash on Psalms 127 (pp. 256b257a); Yalqut Shimoni, Psalms, 881; Midrash on Song of Songs 1 (p. 47). 116. Genesis Rabbah 65:22 (pp. 73435); PRK 15, 5 (pp. 25455); Lamentations Rabbah, Proem 2 (p. 2a); Midrash Hagadol, Genesis 27:22 (p. 474). 117. See Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 19499. See also Augustine, Confessions 8, 12. 118. Y Sanhedrin 10, 29a; Tractate Soferim 18, 7 (p. 319); and, generally, Hezser, Jewish Literacy, 48 68. See also the interesting comment of the sixth-century Christian pilgrim Antoninus of Piacenza, who states that in the Nazareth synagogue there is the bench on which he [Jesus] sat with the other children (Wilkinson, Jerusalem Pilgrims, 79). On the education of children in Roman Italy, see Dyson, Community and Society, 18993. 119. See above, note 15. 120. R. iyya: Genesis Rabbah 52, 4 (pp. 54344); Yalqut Shimoni, Genesis, 87 (p. 402). R. Tanum: PRK 25, 1 (pp. 38081). R. aggai: Midrash on Psalms 93, 8 (pp. 41617). 121. B agigah 15ab. See Liebes, Elishas Sin, 71. 122. Avot de R. Nathan, A, 15 (p. 31); Yalqut Shimoni, Exodus, 379 (p. 698). For a similar tradition, this time with respect to the academy, see B Shabbat 31a.
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Migdal synagogue and overheard a conversation between students and teacher regarding his (R. Simeons) recent act of purifying Tiberias.123 Children would begin their studies at about the age of ve. The Mishnah oers what appears to be a standardized division of subjects and ages: At the age of ve, Bible; at ten, Mishnah; at fteen, Talmud, 124 a progression that seems quite plausible. Rabbinic sources indicate that the synagogue school focused on what we would call today primary or elementary education, with children studying the Bible and Mishnah.125 An interesting description of Bible studies is oered by Eusebius, who, living in Caesarea, had an opportunity to be familiar with Jewish practice: Moreover, they [the Jews] have certain teachers [deuterotai ] of primary studies, for so they liked to call the interpreters of their Scriptures. They make clear those things, obscurely taught in riddles, by means of translation and interpretation. 126 Eusebius perhaps alludes here to the study of midrash or targum, which seems to have been an integral part of some schools curricula per the following rabbinic tradition: This teaches that fear leads one to [study] Scriptures, Scriptures leads one to [study] targum, targum leads one to [study] Mishnah, Mishnah leads one to [study] Talmud. 127 Children appear to have studied the book of Leviticus rst, the practice being explained thusly: just as the young are pure, so they begin with sacrices, which are likewise pure (Let the pure come and deal with things pure).128 Studies beyond the elementary level probably required attendance at another school, possibly one associated with a rabbinic academy.129 Nevertheless, one source speaks explicitly, and in detail, of the advanced subjects studied in the synagogue. We learn that a child begins with a scroll (perhaps in-
123. PRK 11, 16 (p. 193) and parallels. On this tradition generally, see L. Levine, R. Simeon b. Yohai, 14385. 124. Avot 5, 21. The number ve may be schematic. In contrast, the Bavli (Bava Batra 21a) notes the ages of six and seven. In Roman society, by comparison, instruction began at the age of seven and involved reading, writing, and arithmetic during the primary years, until the students were eleven or twelve (Marrou, History of Education, 207; Carcopino, Daily Life, 104). Secondary education focused on literary works, rst and foremost among which was Homers Iliad (Marrou, History of Education, 36980). For the earlier Greek period, see Freeman, Schools of Hellas, 79., 157. 125. Teachers are regularly referred to as , i.e., teachers of the Bible and Mishnah (or Oral Law). See, for example, PRK 27, 2 (p. 406); and below, Chap. 11. On Jewish primary education at this time, see Goldin, Studies in Midrash, 2058. 126. Praeparatio Evangelica 513C, as quoted in York, Targum in the Synagogue and the School, 84; see also Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 57. 127. SifreDeuteronomy 161 (p. 212). See also Avot de R. Nathan, B, 12 (p. 29); B Qiddushin 49a. 128. Leviticus Rabbah 7, 3 (p. 156); PRK 6, 3 (p. 118); Tanuma, Tzav, 14; Yalqut Shimoni, Leviticus, 479 (p. 199). The study of Leviticus may also have been linked to the post-70 hopes for restoration of the Temple sacrices; see Ebner, Elementary Education, 7879. 129. B Berakhot 17a; Midrash Hagadol, Genesis 23:1 (p. 374). Cf. also B Qiddushin 30a; Yalqut Shimoni, Exodus, 376 (p. 691); ibid., Genesis, 158 (pp. 83637).
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tended for reading exercises; perhaps containing biblical texts) and then proceeds to study the Torah, Prophets, and Writings, moving on to the Talmud, Halakhah, and Aggadah.130 Information about the routine in these schools is extremely fragmentary. Children would go to school in the morning, as is attested by Christian as well as Jewish sources.131 The school day seems to have commenced with prayer and probably included the recitation of the Hallel on holidays and the New Moon,132 and studies apparently continued throughout much of the day;133 adults possibly studied on the same premises at night (see below).134 Some children apparently returned home at noontime, either because they were very young and had a short day or because this was their midday break.135 Children from both wealthy and poor homes studied together, and at some point in the morning there was a break for food. In an engaging story, we learn of one child who brought meat, eggs, and most anything his heart desired. Another youngster brought only carobs, a food generally associated with the poor. Because of the blatant dierences in menu, the latter child suered, at which point his father made a special eort, bought meat, and proceeded to prepare an elaborate meal for his son.136 Elementary schoolteachers in the Roman world were often accused of excessive strictness, at times bordering on cruelty. Quintilian has left us a vivid description of such behavior:
But that boys should suer corporal punishment, though it be an accepted custom and Chrysippus makes no object to it, I by no means approve; rst, because it is a disgrace, and a punishment for slaves, and in reality (as will be evident if you imagine the age changed), an aront; secondly, because, if a boys disposition be so abject as not to be amended by reproof, he will be hardened, like the worst of slaves, even to stripes; and lastly, because, if one who regularly exacts his tasks be with him, there will not be the least need of any such chastisement. At present, the negligence of paedagogi seems to be made amends for in such a way that boys are not obliged to do what is right, but are instead punished whenever they have not done it. Besides, after you have coerced a boy with stripes, how will you treat him when he becomes a young man, to whom such terror cannot be held out, and by whom more dicult studies must be pursued? Add to these considerations, that many things unpleasant to be
130. Deuteronomy Rabbah, Nitzavim 3 (p. 115). Notice the absence of the Mishnah in this listing as well the addition of aggadah at the end. 131. Epiphanius, Commentary on Isaiah 19:14; Yalqut Shimoni, Lamentations, 1022. 132. Y Sotah 5, 6, 20c. 133. Exodus Rabbah 47, 5; Pesiqta Rabbati 41 (p. 174a); Midrash on Psalms 14, 6 (p. 114); and perhaps B Qiddushin 26a (= B Bava Qama 114b) as well. On this practice in antiquity, see Freeman, Schools of Hellas, 7980. 134. B Pesaim 8b. 135. Pesiqta Rabbati 43 (p. 182b) (= Yalqut Shimoni, I Samuel, 77). See also Freeman, Schools of Hellas, 80. 136. Deuteronomy Rabbah, Eqev (p. 78); the story continues thereafter in a dierent vein. Note here how the terms school and synagogue are used interchangeably.
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mentioned, and likely afterwards to cause shame, often happen to boys while being whipped, under the inuence of pain or fear; and such shame enervates and depresses the mind, and makes them shun peoples sight and feel a constant uneasiness. If, moreover, there has been too little care in choosing governors and tutors of reputable character, I am ashamed to say how unworthy men may scandalously abuse their privilege of punishing, and what opportunity also the terror of the unhappy children may sometimes aord to others. I will not dwell upon this point; what is already understood is more than enough. It will be sucient, therefore, to intimate that no man should be allowed too much authority over an age so weak and so unable to resist ill-treatment.137
Jewish sources tell of similar behavior. A maidservant ( )once passed the synagogue school and observed a teacher beating a child in an extreme fashion (.) She confronted the teacher, saying that he deserved to be ostracized ( .)When the teacher consulted R. Aa as to the severity of this threat, he was told that he had good cause for worry.138 Straps used for ogging might have become a memorable part of the school experiencethe more distant the memory, perhaps, the better. Two students who had gone on to advanced studies once returned to their childhood school and began playing with the strap, reminiscing about their early (and not always pleasant) experiences.139 At times, sages issued explicit instructions to curb teachers excesses. R. Samuel and R. Isaac once told teachers not to forget to release the students after four hours study in the hot summer season, and R. Yoanan warned teachers not to strike children during the three-week period before the fast of Av.140 On another occasion, R. Abbahu purposely crossed the synagogue courtyard to remind a teacher, known to be a strict disciplinarian, to dismiss the children from school.141 Besides schooling for the young, the community was likewise concerned with adult education,142 and the synagogue presumably served as a setting for this as well. The dekany of those committed to study ( ), referred to in the Aphrodisias inscription, may well have been an organized adult education group.143 Pagan temples in antiquity were often the setting for similar functions, providing visitors with the opportunity to attend lectures and classes, discuss issues with local priests and sages, and visit
137. Quintilian, Institutio Oratoria, 1, 3, 1317 (transl. Murphy, Quintilian, 27). See also Marrou, History of Education, 22022, 36668. 138. Y Moed Qatan 3, 1, 81d. In another case, this time from Babylonia, one sage attempted to dismiss a teacher for excessive cruelty but was overruled by a colleague (B Gittin 36a and parallels). 139. Seder Eliyahu Rabbah 5 (p. 25). 140. Midrash on Psalms 91 (pp. 199ab). 141. Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a. 142. Cf. Aberbach, Jewish Education, 14.; S. Safrai, Education, 95869. 143. One passage in a late midrashic collection highlights this type of congregational instruction on the Sabbath in the academy; in certain places this may have included the synagogue as well; see Yalqut Shimoni, Exodus, 407.
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a public library.144 Rabbinic sages urged people to stop into the synagogue on their way home from work at night to study for a while.145 R. Yoanan asserted that one who studies in the synagogue would not easily forget what he has learned;146 R. Yonatan b. R. Eliezer met someone in a marketplace who asked him for instruction, and the sage referred him to the bet talmud (probably located in the local synagogue), where he promised to teach him.147 The rabbis lost no opportunity to emphasize among themselves as well as to others the importance of such study: he who teaches the public at large merits the Holy Spirit.148 Moreover, they even assumed that schools were already in existence at the time of the biblical Patriarchs.149 Some sages would conduct study sessions in or near synagogues.150 Thus, R. Judah I, who lived in Sepphoris the last seventeen years of his life, would at times sit and study in front of the citys Babylonian synagogue, as did R. Yoanan a generation later.151 Involvement in every level of education not only was an abstract value for the sages; it also guaranteed that their ranks would be replenished from generation to generation:
If there are no small children, there will be no [future] disciples; If there are no disciples, there will be no sages; If there are no sages, there will be no Torah; If there is no Torah, there will be no synagogues and academies; If there are no synagogues and academies, the Holy One, Blessed be He, will no longer allow His Presence [Shekhinah] to dwell in this world.152
Library
The Second Temple of Jerusalem apparently contained sacred booksnot only Torah scrolls but also, as seems to be noted by both Josephus and the Mishnah, other
144. MacMullen, Paganism, 11 and nn. 5152. 145. Avot de R. Nathan, A, 2 (p. 14). 146. Y Berakhot 5, 1, 9a. 147. Tanuma, Leviticus, Buqotai, 4 (p. 55a). 148. Song of Songs Rabbah 1, 9 (ed. Dunesky, p. 8). 149. Yalqut Shimoni, Genesis, 152 (p. 820). It is hard to assess the accuracy (or even the historical kernel) of Jeromes sweeping statement that Jews run to the synagogue every day to study the Law, in their desire to know what Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and the rest of the holy men did, and to learn by heart the books of Moses and the prophets (from Comm. to Isaiah 58, cited by Parkes, Conict of the Church and the Synagogue, 154). 150. In addition to these two principal locales, sages also taught at the Patriarchs home (B Ketubot 34a), at the city-gate (Midrash Hagadol, Genesis 25:8 [pp. 42021]), and in the elds (Yalqut Shimoni, Genesis, 110 [p. 505]). 151. B Ketubot 103b104a; Genesis Rabbah 33, 3 (p. 305); Y Berakhot 5, 9a. For a more detailed discussion, see below, Chap. 13. On R. Judahs seventeen years in Sepphoris, see Y Kilaim 9, 4, 32b (= Y Ketubot 12, 3, 35a). 152. Leviticus Rabbah 11, 7 (p. 230).
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holy books (perhaps a reference to the remainder of the biblical corpus).153 Synagogues, in a far more modest fashion, appear to have had libraries as well. We read of a book of aggadah that was perused by sages on the Sabbath,154 and Jerome refers to books borrowed from a synagogue in Rome. His Jewish teacher appears to have overstepped his bounds in presenting him with scrolls he had taken from a synagogue.155 How extensive such synagogue libraries may have been is impossible to know. Clearly, they diered from congregation to congregation, depending upon local economic resources and local intellectual and cultural proclivities. Synagogues in Alexandria, Antioch, and Tiberias were undoubtedly much more richly endowed in this regard than the average rural ones. Pagan temples also had libraries or archives.156 According to Cassius Dio, most Egyptian sanctuaries contained sacred books, a fact seemingly corroborated by Origen, who speaks of the wisdom of Egypt as reected in its literature and of priests as the acknowledged experts.157 Aristides tells of large collections of the wondrous deeds (aretai) of Serapis that were kept in sacred archives, while Augustine notes the existence of libraries in the temples of Cybele in North Africa.158
Place of Residence
One or more rooms in a synagogue complex might have served as a place of residence. This was certainly the case in situations where an individual had transferred part of his property to the community for use as a synagogue, what is referred to as a synagogue of an individual. 159 In Stobi, for instance, Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos designated part of his home for use by the congregation, stipulating what was to remain for himself and his family.160 If, indeed, the Leontis inscription from Bet Shean belongs to a private home, then there, too, we have an instance of a small prayer room within a private residence that was set aside for a congregation of worshippers.161
153. See SifreDeuteronomy 356 (p. 423); Josephus, Antiquities 16, 164; M Megillah 3, 1. 154. Yalqut Shimoni, Leviticus, 481 (p. 202). 155. Jerome, Letter 36, 1. See also Hezser, Jewish Literacy, 16567. 156. See Plato, Timaeus 23a: And if any event has occurred that is noble and great, all such events are recorded from of old and preserved here in our temples. On the library in the Temple of Apollo on the Palatine in Rome, see Suetonius, Augustus 31; Galinsky, Augustan Culture, 218. 157. Roman History 76, 13, 1: He [Septimius Severus] inquired into everything, including things that were very carefully hidden; for he was the kind of person to leave nothing, either human or divine, uninvestigated. Accordingly, he took away from practically all the sanctuaries all the books that he could nd containing any secret lore. See also Contra Celsum 1, 12; Griths, Egypt and the Rise of the Synagogue, 1114. 158. Aristides, Oracles 8, 54; Augustine, City of God 2, 7. A library is noted in the Christian church of Cirta, Numidia, that dates from the early fourth century; see White, Building Gods House, 122. 159. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. 160. See above, Chap. 8. 161. Zori, House of Kyrios Leontis, 12334.
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The synagogue may also have served as a place of residence for its azzan; 162 in an anachronistic vein, the targum speaks of the biblical Jacob performing menial tasks in a school ( ) while actually living on the premises.163 Interestingly, the sages themselves were aware of the fact that pagan temples also had rooms reserved for at least some of their priests.164 Finally, a third use of the synagogue as a residence was in its capacity as a hostel. Although sources in this regard are limited, those that do exist suggest a well-known practice. The earliest evidence, of course, is the rst-century Theodotos inscription from Jerusalem, which explicitly states that the synagogue served as a hostel for visitors from abroad.165 Rabbinic literature is likewise unambiguous. The Bavli speaks of people who eat, drink, and sleep in the synagogue on Sabbath and holidays, and thus the need arose to recite the Qiddush (blessing over wine) at the conclusion of the evening synagogue service, a practice that continues in Diaspora synagogues to this day.166 Several third-century traditions refer to visitors who, upon arriving in Tiberias, rst went to the synagogue, perhaps to seek lodgings. R. Ami instructed an ocial of the local synagogue that such people were to be welcomed only if they showed some knowledge of the Torah.167 Presumably, soldiers were on occasion billeted in a synagoguemuch to the consternation of its members. An edict from the time of Valentinian I (ca. 370 c.e.) declares that the synagogue was to be considered a religionum loca and was thus not to be used by soldiers seeking a place to stay (hospitium).168
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synagogue itself.169 Grooms were welcomed into the synagogue to be blessed and praised, and were then accompanied to their homes in a festive procession.170 The synagogue also appears to have been the setting for a public eulogy () and is mentioned in this context in a number of instances, particularly with respect to several Babylonian sages.171 To what extent this may have been the practice of the wider Jewish community, either regularly or occasionally, is unknown. Several sources note that there were times when a body was placed in one of the rooms of a synagogue prior to burial. Once, while teaching in the Maradata synagogue of Caesarea, R. Abbahu was confronted with a situation in which priests recited the priestly blessing during a worship service but were then hesitant to partake of a meal owing to the presence of a corpse. R. Abbahu chided them for being concerned about purity requirements with regard to food but not with respect to the priestly blessing.172 In early fourth-century Babylonia, a similar question arose with regard to a synagogue of Roman (?) Jews.173 Presumably, a corpse was lying in an adjacent room ( ,)and when the priests asked Rava what they should do about the priestly blessing, he instructed them to set a wooden chest in the doorway to create a partition.174 Much more intriguing is the enigmatic statement of R. Elazar: One must have a nail or peg xed in a synagogue so that he will merit and be buried in that place, 175 i.e., having a xed and permanent place in the synagogue guarantees such a person a burial place there. Malalas oers an interesting account of an attack on the Jews of Antioch by the Greens in the time of the emperor Zeno (474491): They dug up the remains of the Jews who were buried along the length of the synagogue . . . and threw the bones in the re. 176 How accurate this report is, and how widespread such a practice might have been, is impossible to determine. Whatever the case, to the best of our knowledge, on the basis of both archaeological and literary sources, Jews then, as now, have shied away from burials in synagogues, which were quite common in the Christian context.
169. B Shabbat 150a; B Ketubot 5a. 170. Tractate Soferim 19, 9 (pp. 33536). 171. T Megillah 2, 18 (p. 353); B Megillah 28b. See also M Megillah 3, 3. The Bavli interprets public eulogy as a speech delivered in the presence of an important personage or in memory of the deceased. Perhaps it is the oering of eulogies upon Judah Is death that is being referred to with regard to the eighteen synagogues in the area of Sepphoris; see Y Kilaim 9, 4, 32b; Y Ketubot 12, 3, 35a. 172. Y Berakhot 3, 6a; Y Nazir 7, 2, 56a. Similar circumstances may be referred to in incidents involving R. iyya bar Abba and R. Zeira (Y Berakhot 3, 1, 6a), as well as R. Yose (Y Bava Metzia 2, 9, 8d), although the context in the latter may be the academy. 173. On the assumption that the reference is to Roman Jews in Babylonia, see S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 222. 174. B Megillah 26b. 175. Leviticus Rabbah 5, 5, (p. 116). See D. Kraemer, Meanings of Death, 77. 176. Jereys et al., eds., Chronicle of John Malalas, 21819.
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In the pre-70 era, public consolation of mourners is mentioned in connection with the southern entrances and passageways of the Temple Mount.177 Those who did not have regular access to the Temple Mount may have been oered some form of public solace within the context of the local community, perhaps in the city-gate area, the city or village square, or in the synagogue. Later on, however, in the post-70 period, a more formal custom seems to have crystallized within the synagogue. It is impossible to assess when this took place; one tradition dates this development to the Yavnean period, at the same time that a number of other Temple practices were in the process of being transferred to the synagogue.178 In Late Antiquity, a special section was apparently reserved for mourners coming to the synagogue to be comforted, either just outside the synagogue door (i.e., in the courtyard) or in some corner of the main hall. Upon completion of the Sabbath Mussaf service, the azzan would approach them, oer an appropriate blessing, and then recite the Qaddish.179 A similar procedure was followed on weekdays as well.180 Aside from the universal life-cycle needs that the community addressed within the synagogue, individuals came there for help in moments of personal stress. One wellattested need was that of healing. Throughout the Greco-Roman period, Jews and Judaism were often associated with prowess in magic and supernatural powers.181 Healing within a synagogue setting is clearly reected in a number of gospel narratives, and such was the case in pagan temples as well.182 In the fourth century, as noted, John Chrysostom was distressed by the large number of Christians ocking to the synagogue for healing, presumably condent of success through the use of Jewish amulets and incantations:183 What kind of excuse will we give if, when we suer and undergo misfortunes because of fever or bodily hurts, we run to the synagogues. 184 And, Yet if you have a minor illness, you immediately turn away from his authority and run to demons and ee to the synagogues. 185
177. M Middot 2, 2. 178. Tractate Soferim 19, 9 (pp. 33536). 179. Ibid.; cf. Y Pesaim 8, 8, 36b. See also Lieberman, TK, I, 49. In Babylonia, mourners were greeted outside the synagogue in the town square ( ;)see B Ketubot 8b; and comments in Lieberman, TK, V, 118081. See also Hezser, Form, Function, and Historical Signicance, 8081. 180. Pirqei dRabbi Eliezer 17 (end) as per Lieberman, TK, I, 49. 181. See, for example, Josephus, Antiquities 8, 46; and the overviews provided in Schrer, History, III, 34279; Gager, Moses, 13461; M. Smith, Jesus the Magician; Kee, Miracle in the Early Christian World; idem, Medicine, Miracle and Magic; as well as Crossan, Historical Jesus, 13767. See also Chap. 8. 182. For example, Matt. 12:9.; Luke 13:10. See also E. P. Sanders, Jesus and Judaism, 15773; Vermes, Jesus the Jew, 2226, 5882; as well as citations in the previous note. On pagan temples, see MacMullen, Paganism, 4962. 183. Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 8394. 184. Adv. Iud. 8, 5, 6. 185. Ibid., 8, 8, 79.
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Most unusual is a practice associated by Chrysostom with the synagogue at Daphne near Antioch and also well documented in the temples of Asclepius in the late Empire; people would spend the night in the holy precinct in the hope of recovery: And I say this not only about the synagogue here in the city but also about the one in Daphne. For the pit of destruction there, which they call Matrona, is even more evil. For I have heard that many of the faithful have gone up there to practice incubation in the shrine. But I shall not be calling such people unfaithful. Both the synagogue of Matrona and the temple of Apollo are equally impure to me. 186 Rabbinic sources are relatively silent regarding this aspect of the synagogue, though stories dealing with the healing and magical powers of sages are numerous.187 Nevertheless, the connection is made in several instances. In one curious statement, the synagogue is where the angel of death is said to have deposited his belongings when visiting a city; therefore, when a plague befalls a city no one should enter the synagogue unaccompanied.188 The late magical tract, The Sword of Moses, on the other hand, states very explicitly: should you desire that people be fearful of you, then write on a lead slate . . . and bury it in a synagogue toward the west;189 in a fragment of a magical text found in the Cairo Genizah, one is told to bury an amulet under the Torah ark in the synagogue.190 Indeed, similar texts have been found in the excavations of the Merot and Maon (Nirim) synagogues.191 The same awe of the synagogue setting holds true with regard to the oaths and vows taken by individuals. Once again, Chrysostom provides us with dramatic testimony; he claims that ordinary Christians considered such oaths to be more eective if taken in a synagogue and not a church.192 Veneration for synagogue-associated oaths by Jews is attested in several later rabbinic sources.193 A person might have taken the opportunity when the congregation met in the synagogue to demand that those who could testify on his or her behalf should come forward.194 Access to a synagogue might also be used as a form of punishment. The story is told of a father who was angry with his son for not providing for (i.e., feeding) him; R. Yonatan
186. Ibid., 1, 6, 23; 1, 8, 1. 187. See, for example, Goldin, Magic, 11547. 188. B Bava Qama 60b. 189. The Sword of Moses XXII, 82 [105] (ed. Harari, p. 44). 190. See Naveh, Aramaic and Hebrew Inscriptions, 303. 191. Naveh and Shaked, Amulets and Magical Bowls, 16, 9192; Naveh, Aramaic Amulet from Baram, 17986; and below, Chap. 11. 192. Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 7983. 193. First Apology 45; Pesiqta Rabbati 22 (p. 113a); Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 20:7 (pp. 41011). Cf., however, Leviticus Rabbah 6, 3 (p. 131), where a synagogue context is not mentioned. 194. M Shevuot 4, 10.
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advised him to prevent his son from entering the synagogue (how, though, we are not told) and thus humiliate him publicly.195 People may have had recourse to a synagogue for far more prosaic reasons. Valuables left there or lost elsewhere were brought to the synagogue for reclamation.196 We are told that petty thieves at times took advantage of such procedures by claiming items not their own.197 Synagogues may have also been used for the safekeeping of monies, much the way a modern-day bank is used. The Jerusalem Temple appears to have once served in such a capacity, and judging by the hoards found there, this practice may have carried over to the synagogue.198 From the foregoing, we can assess the extent to which the synagogue lled a wide variety of functions required by the Jewish community. In this sense, the synagogue was not entirely sui generis within the ancient world; many of these functions were performed in many pagan temples and, later on, in churches. Nevertheless, if there is some element of uniqueness to be found in the synagogues communal dimension, it may be in its all-encompassing centrality. Neither the pagan temple nor the church appears to have combined so many communal activities under one roof, nor did they need to. Pagans before the fourth century and Christians thereafter had a range of municipal institutions at their disposal that addressed non-liturgical needs. Most Jewish communities, excluding the academy that primarily served the rabbinic elite, had but one address with regard to their communal needs.199 Thus, for example, the presence of a court was a very rare phenomenon in a pagan temple or church, and these institutions did not house schools for primary education. The pagan elite had special schools and private instructors for their youth, and, for want of a local institution, they often sent their children to nearby cities for instruction.200 The church, likewise, did not provide for the schooling of the young,
195. Y Peah 1, 1, 15d; Y Qiddushin 1, 8, 61c; and A. Grossman, Origins and Essence, 199203. 196. B Bava Metzia 28b. 197. Y Bava Metzia 2, 9, 8d; see Hezser, Form, Function, and Historical Signicance, 7880, 307. 198. II Macc. 3, 1012. On synagogues where caches of money have been found (certainly public funds, but perhaps also money belonging to individuals), see above, as well as Chap. 9. 199. L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 43. This was certainly the case for Jews living in small towns and villages as well as in large urban centers. In such Jewish cities, such as Tiberias, Sepphoris, and Lydda, there would have been other Jewish institutions at their disposal. 200. See the fascinating story reported by Pliny the Younger (Letter IV, 13) in this regard. When he asked a father living in Como, a provincial town in northern Italy, why he had sent his son to Milan for schooling, the reply was: We have no teachers here. Plinys response was as follows: How is that? . . . Surely it nearly concerns you who are fathers . . . that your sons should receive their education here rather than elsewhere. . . . Upon what easy terms might you by a general contribution procure teachers if you would apply toward raising a salary for them what you now pay for your sons lodgings, journeys, and whatever a man has to pay when away from home. . . . Why I, who have as yet no children, am ready to give a third part of any sum you think proper to raise for this purpose for the benet of our commonwealth, which I regard as a daughter.
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utilizing, for the most part, existing institutions.201 Thus, studying, so characteristic of Judaism from the Second Temple era onward, was an activity absorbed by the synagogue that contributed signicantly to the uniqueness of this institution in Late Antiquity.202
201. Marrou, History of Education, 39799; Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 24. 202. Nevertheless, it should be noted that some of the above functions of the synagogue were to be found in rabbinic academies as well: collection of charity (Leviticus Rabbah 4, 3 [p. 113]; Deuteronomy Rabbah 4, 8 [ed. Mirkin, p. 79]; Exodus Rabbah 41, 2); festive meals (Y Shabbat 20, 1, 17c); discussion of communal issues (B Shabbat 150a; B Ketubot 5a); court proceedings (B Yevamot 65b); and study. Presumably, classes for children were also held there on occasion (Y agigah 2, 1, 77b; 2, 3, 78a and parallels; B Shabbat 104a; Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 34:8 [p. 710]; Yalqut Shimoni, Genesis, 110 [pp. 51920]). All this presupposes, however, that there was no conation of synagogue and academy functions by later editors.
eleven
LEADERSHIP
he cadre of synagogue leadership that determined the policy of the institution and directed its aairs is a pivotal aspect of how the ancient synagogue functioned. Although the titles of ocials and their roles have been only sporadically investigated over the past century, the dramatic increase in the publication of epigraphical material in recent decades has revitalized interest in this area.1 The study of leadership in the ancient synagogue is fraught with diculties. Although the epigraphical and literary sources are far from negligible (the latter including both Jewish and non-Jewish material), the historical reality behind these sources is relatively unknown, resulting in strikingly diverse scholarly assessments. Moreover, the sources themselves may appear contradictory, as, for instance, when comparing literary and epigraphical data, rabbinic and Christian material, or Roman and Byzantine legal sources and, not least, when attempting to make sense of the rabbinic and epigraphical material from Jewish Palestine on the one hand and the epigraphical evidence from the Diaspora on the other. However, these sources may reect a variety of organizational settings throughout the Roman world, and such an assumption may oer the best explanation for what often seems to be a bewildering range of titles. The relevant data regarding synagogue leadership are geographically diuse, deriving from almost every corner of the Roman world and beyondfrom Babylonia to Spain,
1. Regarding epigraphical publications in recent decades, see above, Chap. 1.
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from North Africa to central Europe and the Crimea. It has become clear with the passage of time and the accumulation of evidence that this material is unevenly spread, varying from region to region throughout the Empire. While some titles of ocials appear quite often in certain geographical regions, in others they are negligible, if not almost entirely absent. The chronological range is likewise broad, from as early as the Hellenistic period down to the end of Late Antiquity and beyonda period of over one thousand years. To further complicate matters, some individuals bear more than one title, often leaving us to wonder what, in fact, the areas of responsibility of each oce were. Finally, these titles are recorded in the extant literary and epigraphical material with no explanation of their signicance or meaning, thus oering little, if any, indication of the nature of the roles and functions involved. Even when we have an idea of the function of a given ocial, it remains unclear to which communal framework this title refers. For example, it is not always known whether certain titles relate directly to the synagogue or to the Jewish community at large. Granted, an archon was a layman with some sort of administrative or political responsibility, often of a supervisory nature: was he part of a community-wide board or did his title relate specically to a synagogue context, presumably in reference to the governing body of that institution? This last-mentioned consideration touches upon the fundamental question as to how Jewish communities were organized at the time and how the synagogue, with its leadership and administrative setup, t into the overall communal framework. The issues here are many and complex. How similar were the institutional structures of Diaspora and Palestinian communities? Was there a dierent administrative framework for communities of various sizes or for those in a rural as against an urban setting? Did the communal structures in the urban settings where Jews constituted the majority (e.g., in Tiberias and Sepphoris) operate dierently from communal structures in places where they were a minority, especially in the Diaspora? Or were there a variety of possible models in evidence throughout the larger Greco-Roman world from which each community chose whatever suited its specic needs? In the past century, there was a consensus that organizational patterns were largely the same for all Jewish communities throughout the Empire. While there were some variations regarding denition and delineation, the fundamental assumption of a common communal pattern was nevertheless widely shared.2 It was generally agreed that Jewish communities were governed by a gerousia composed of archons and headed by a gerousiarch. All communal activities were controlled by this body, either directly or through appointed or elected ocials charged with specic functions. The situation in Alexandria
2. Schrer, History, II, 429.; Juster, Les Juifs, I, 438.; Frey, CIJ, I, lxxxii.; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 103.; La Piana, Foreign Groups, 361. See also Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 36874; Applebaum, Organization of the Jewish Communities, 464503; A. Kasher, Jews in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, 20811, 289309.
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and, to a much lesser extent, Berenice played a signicant role in forming this consensus, however in Rome, according to the catacomb inscriptions, there appears to have been an unusual emphasis on individual synagogues and an apparent absence of any all-embracing communal organization.3 Nevertheless, some scholars still claimed that a similar kind of overarching communal apparatus existed there.4 Recent decades have witnessed a signicant conceptual change regarding the question of Jewish communal organization. With the proliferation of studies relating to specic Jewish communities,5 there is an increasing awareness of a wide range of Jewish communal practices and organizational forms that existed throughout the Roman Empire. Not only is it generally agreed that Rome and Alexandria present radically dierent organizational models, but we have further evidence for this diversity in Berenice and Asia Minor, as well as Palestine. As with other aspects of the synagogue, so, too, the organizational structure of Jewish communities at large, and of the synagogue in particular, was a likely candidate for absorbing and assimilating outside inuences. This has been the case since the very beginning of Jewish history and indeed continues to the present.6 The inuence of surrounding urban and regional patterns on any given Jewish community can often be easily detected in the social and political dimensions of communal life. In what follows, only those ocials most directly associated with the synagogue will be discussed: the archisynagogue, archon, pater and mater synagoges, presbyter, grammateus, phrontistes, azzan, and teacher. Other ocials whose direct association with the synagogue is far less certain (e.g., parnas, gerousiarch, and prostates)7 will not be treated. As noted, the nature and denition of Jewish communal leadership, especially synagogue leadership, has received increasing scholarly attention over the past decade and a half.8 Several contributions are noteworthy. The rst is a monograph by Brooten (Women Leaders in the Ancient Synagogue, 1982), who examines the evidence for female leadership
3. Schrer, Die Gemeindeverfassung, 15.; Frey, CIJ, I, ciicxi; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 170. 4. Juster, Les Juifs, I, 41824; Vogelstein, Rome, 32; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 137.; La Piana, Foreign Groups, 361.; Baron, Jewish Community, I, 99107; Schrer, History, II, 199. 5. See the studies of the following authors regarding Diaspora communities: Rome (Vogelstein, Leon), Egypt (Tcherikover, A. Kasher), Antioch (Meeks and Wilken), Asia Minor (Trebilco), and the Diaspora generally (Smallwood, M. Stern, Feldman). On Jewish communities in Roman Palestine, see: Lydda ( J. J. Schwartz, Oppenheimer), Jericho ( J. J. Schwartz), Sepphoris (Miller), Caesarea (L. Levine, Ringel), Bet Shean (Fuks), and Tiberias (Avissar, Hirschfeld). 6. For an overview of this phenomenon over the course of Jewish history, see Baron, Jewish Community, I, 1021, 95107, 283347. 7. The evidence from Rome is exceptional in this regard, as every oce there seems to have been connected with a synagogue. So, for example, we read of gerousiarchs of the Augustesian and Agrippesian synagogues (Noy, JIWE, II, nos. 96, 130). 8. Before that time, the basic studies in this respect included Juster, Jes Juifs, I, 45056; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 11259; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 36874; Frey, CIJ, I, lxxxiici; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 16594.
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in the ancient synagogue in a wide range of sources mentioning the various titles accorded synagogue ocials generally. In volume IV of New Documents Illustrating Early Christianity (1987), G. H. R. Horsley addresses the issue of synagogue leadership extensively. In 1992, Burtchaell published a monograph, From Synagogue to Church, in which he espouses the theory that Jewish communal organization, and especially that of the synagogue, had a profound inuence on the structure of the early church. In this context, Burtchaell accorded the former extensive treatment in order to account for the development of the latter. In an article entitled Archisynagogoi (1993), Rajak and Noy examine the oce of the archisynagogue in detail, arguing for a rather revolutionary understanding of this title (see below). Finally, Williams (Structure, 1994) addresses the many leadership titles associated with the synagogues of Rome, claiming a large measure of variation among them,9 and, as noted earlier in our study, both Binder and Claussen have addressed this issue, particularly with regard to the rst century.10
ARCHISYNAGOGUE
The archisynagogue is the ocial most commonly associated with the synagogue and its operation. Our discussion will deal extensively with this oce not only because of its prominence, but also because most of the central issues regarding synagogue leadership seem to revolve around this position. Scholarly opinion regarding this oce has uctuated markedly over the past century. The dominant view maintains that this oce was primarily, if not exclusively, spiritual and religious (e.g., Schrer, Juster, S. Krauss, Frey, and La Piana).11 Opinions dier, however, with respect to the type of religious status enjoyed by the archisynagogue, whether he was the primary religious and spiritual gure within the institution or merely in charge of the worship settinga kind of gloried attendant (shamash).12 The powerful inuence of New Testament depictions, often supported by rabbinic passages, has helped the above perception gain ascendancy. A second approach, although basically in agreement with the rst, nevertheless takes into consideration the epigraphical evidence that focuses on the archisynagogue as a benefactor, one who contributed to the construction of the facility or its repair and restoration. Thus, scholars holding this latter position have added a further dimension to
9. See also Feldman, Diaspora Synagogues, 5562, a recent overview; Levinskaya, Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 18593; van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 89101. Regarding Syria, see Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, 28194. 10. See above, Chap. 5; Binder, Into the Temple Courts, 34371; Claussen, Versammlung, 25693. 11. Schrer, Die Gemeindeverfassung, 2728; idem, History, II, 434; Juster, Les Juifs, I, 45053; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 11421; Frey, CIJ, I, xcviii; La Piana, Foreign Groups, 35960. See also Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 1045; Vogelstein, Rome, 3031. 12. See, for example, Marmorstein, Synagogue of Theodotos, 2425.
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the rst view that would account for the nancial contributions made by the archisynagogue. Elbogen was the rst to highlight this aspect, and he has since been joined by Leon, Schrage, and Linder.13 Only recently, however, has the pendulum come full swing, with the epigraphical evidence contributing decisively to an understanding of this oce.14 According to Rajak and Noy, the archisynagogue was primarily a patron and benefactor whose title was honorary in nature. It was bestowed by Jewish communities only on those individuals who helped maintain and enhance the physical and material aspects of the synagogue. The basic dierence between the above views revolves primarily around the sources upon which each relies. The rst position has traditionally been anchored in evidence from the New Testament, which highlights the religious role of the archisynagogue, and this is also the thrust of the relevant rabbinic and patristic sources. In contrast, Rajak and Noy rely exclusively on epigraphical data, dismissing the literary material as tendentious and historically unreliable. A medial, more inclusive, approach takes into account both the literary and epigraphical sources, amalgamating the religious and nancial components in its denition of the oce. There is, however, a fourth alternative, whereby the archisynagogue often assumed not only religious and nancial roles, but political and administrative ones as well. It recognizes the need to give due consideration to all the above-noted primary sources, even those that appear to be polemical and historically problematic. This approach gives weight to the fact that a number of these sources indeed overlap and thus, in eect, reinforce the depiction found in each. In short, the oce of the archisynagogue involved overall responsibility for all facets of the institution, as, in fact, the title itself seems to convey. While several scholars have in the past attributed certain administrative and nancial components to this oce, these aspects, for the most part, have been alluded to only eetingly. Leon, for example, mentions an administrative dimension en passant when discussing the archisynagogue as a representative of the institution when interacting with the larger community.15 Brooten, following a remark by Juster, speaks of the archisynagogue, together with the elders, as being responsible for transferring monies to the Patriarch.16 All this, of course, is in addition to the other functions clearly noted in the literary and epigraphical material, i.e., as the one in charge of worship and as a nancial patron. Stern has the following succinct and apt remark to make on the subject: In the Roman period the archisynagogus had the most important function in the Jewish communities. The supervision of the synagogue was concentrated in his hands. 17 Burtchaell, too, gives
13. Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 36869; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 17172; Schrage, , 844 47; Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 137 n. 10. See also Juster, Les Juifs, I, 45253. 14. Rajak and Noy, Archisynagogoi, 7593. 15. Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 172. 16. Juster, Les Juifs, I, 45253; Brooten, Women Leaders, 28. 17. M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 630.
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expression to this more encompassing view, although he qualies it by proposing a reconstruction of Jewish communal organization that is rather articial and speculative.18 This last view of the archisynagogue appears to be the most historically sound. Thus, in attempting to assess the nature and importance of the oce, it is necessary to take into account all relevant sources and not exclude any simply because they appear to be polemical, tendentious, late, or seemingly incoherent. Even these types of sources may reect a historical reality in their details, especially if they appear as obiter dicta. We must never forget that even polemical sources must bear some modicum of truth if they are to be believed, as the authors clearly intended. The fact remains that such sources exist and thus must be regarded as evidence. They describe either a historical reality as purported, a situation current in the authors day, or one that the author (for whatever reason) desired to project. Generally speaking, a source should be acknowledged to have at least some measure of historical value, unless a case can be made to disqualify it completely. In examining the evidence itself, a number of aspects of this oce become eminently clear. First and foremost is the extent to which the title archisynagogos was to be found throughout the Jewish world of Late Antiquity. This conclusion is based primarily, though not exclusively, on epigraphical material spanning the rst seven centuries of the Common Era and is attested in Palestine ( Jerusalem, Caesarea, Sepphoris, Achziv, and presumably many Galilean settings, per rabbinic sources), Phoenicia (Beirut, Tyre, and Sidon), Arabia (Bostra), Syria (Antioch and Apamea), Asia Minor (Phrygia, Lycia, Caria, Ephesus, Teos, Myndos, Acmonia, Smyrna, and Sid), Cyprus, Crete, Greece (Corinth and Aegina), Lower Moesia (Oescus), Italy (Rome, Ostia, Brescia, Venosa, Capua), Egypt (Alexandria), North Africa (Carthage, Naro-ammam Lif ), and Spain (Tarragona). In most of the above locales, the term archisynagogos appears only once, but in Acmonia, Apamea, Venosa, Jerusalem, and Rome, it appears from two to ve times. Thus, only a few fringe regions of the Empire (the northwestern, southwestern, and northeastern provinces) are bereft of evidence for this oce, just as they are for most other types of Jewish oceholders. Nevertheless, it seems that the term archisynagogos was more popular in some areas than in others. It is almost totally absent from Egyptian and Cyrenian material (appear18. Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 244: What emerges from the evidence is an enduring perception from within the Jewish people that this ocer, the archisynaggos, was not simply a master of religious ceremonies. He was the executive of the local community, acting under the formal oversight of the elders. . . . He presided over the community, he convened it for its activities, he superintended its sta. It was a position of some permanency, and one in which fathers might hope to see their sons succeed them. The community chief was, if not the most prestigious member of his community socially, the one who worked, often professionally, as the man at the forefront of his people. As broad as were the interest and the programs and services of his community, so broadly reached the breadth of his responsibility. If he presided at worship, it was because he presided at all community functions. See also G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 218; Williams, Structure of Roman Jewry, 135.
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ing only in one late third-century c.e. inscription in the former), and this is consistent with the fact that the term synagoge was not widely used in these regions. This correlation is true of the Black Sea region and the island of Delos as well, for in these two places the term proseuche was dominant. In rabbinic literature, archisynagogue appears in its Hebrew equivalent (rosh knesset) about a dozen times in nine independent pericopae and is noted in connection with several specic localesAchziv and Tiberias in Palestine, and Bostra in Provincia Arabia. In addition, the church fathers Justin and Epiphanius refer to the archisynagogue, and the title appears in a number of edicts in the Theodosian Code, as well as in several books of the Scriptores Historiae Augustae. Let us review the evidence preserved in the six types of sources at our disposal: the New Testament, the writings of the church fathers, rabbinic literature, pagan literature, imperial legislative documents, and inscriptions.19 New Testament. The term archisynagogos appears in three booksMark, Luke, and Acts. The two gospels take note of an archisynagogue named Jairos, whose daughter was healed by Jesus (Mark 5:22, 35, 36, 38; Luke 8:49). Of interest is Lukes usage of another term, archon of the synagogue (8:41), which is parallel to Mark 5:22.20 In Luke 13:10 17, an archisynagogue was reportedly angry with Jesus when the latter healed a woman on the Sabbath: There are six days in which work ought to be done; so come during those days and be healed, but not on the Sabbath (13:14). Archisynagogue also appears in Acts, where the oce is accorded a religious persona; the archisynagogues in Antioch of Pisidia invited Paul to speak immediately following the Torah and haftarah readings (Acts 13:15). Moreover, Acts mentions two Corinthian archisynagogues by nameCrispus, who became a believer in Jesus (18:8), and Sosthenes, who apparently led the opposition to Paul (18:17). Both gures appear to have commanded respect within the community, the former by bringing other converts with him to the new faith (18:8), the latter by apparently organizing a protest on behalf of the local Roman governor against this perceived breach of the Law (18:1217).21 It is worth noting a textual variant to Acts 14:2 found in Codex D. Instead of the usual reading, The Jews who did not believe, this text reads: The archisynagogues of the Jews and the archons of the synagogue. This is indeed a very unusual and perplexing phraseology; whether it reects an actual, though sui generis, use of these titles, rather than a confusion in the mind of the tradent or scribe, is unclear.
19. For a review of the evidence, see Juster, Les Juifs, I, 45053; Brooten, Women Leaders, 1527; Schrage, in TDNT, VII, 84447; Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 24044; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 16880; Rives, Religion and Authority in Roman Carthage, 221; and above, notes 9, 11, 14. 20. In Matt. 9:18 and 23, only the term archon appears. 21. Sosthenes here is probably the person of the same name in I Cor. 1:1; see ICC, loc. cit.; Haenchen, Acts, 53637.
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In summary, the New Testament evidence attests to a prestigious oce associated with a leadership role within the synagogue in the political and especially religious realms. Church Fathers. Several patristic sources mention the archisynagogue, albeit cryptically. Justin notes that after prayer the archisynagogues taught the people to mock Jesus.22 Here, too, this ocial is cast as an instructor of sorts in a religious-social sphere. Epiphanius oers a somewhat more substantive picture. In describing the Ebionite sect, he takes note of the presbyters and [or: who are] archisynagogues who functioned as leaders of this sect and had a hand in arranging matrimonial relationships within their synagogues. 23 Given the fact that this is a Jewish-Christian group, the use of Jewish names and titles may reect a proclivity to imitate Jewish parlance. This might have applied not only to the title archisynagogos, but also to the nature of the position. Of far greater import is a second passage in which Epiphanius describes the ocials in Diaspora synagogues, particularly those of Asia Minor.24 In the context of the story of Joseph the Comes, who was sent to Cilicia by the Patriarch to oversee synagogue aairs, presumably in the time of Constantine, Epiphanius names the following types of Jewish ocials: archisynagogues, priests, presbyters, and azzanim (whom he denes as diakonoi or hyperetes). There is really no compelling reason to dismiss this list as a curious and scarcely coherent collection of seemingly token titles. 25 These were probably the most prominent synagogue ocials whom Epiphanius chose to identify, and each undoubtedly had some sort of religious and/or administrative responsibility. The only other patristic comment of importance was made by Palladius in the early fth century; he notes a rumor (it is said) that the Patriarch makes annual appointments of archisynagogues on the basis of bribes received.26 The obviously hostile and polemical tone of this report, however, should not automatically lead us to assume that it has no historical value whatsoever. The fact that communal appointments were made regularly (whatever their nature, frequency, and reception) by Patriarchs may certainly reect contemporary practice. It is dicult to imagine why Palladius or anyone else would have invented such an accusation if there was absolutely no basis for such a practice. As noted above, even a distortion of reality often has a kernel of truth. In fact, we have some indirect corroboration of Palladius claim for regular appointments of certain synagogue ocials in a late third-century Christian text, which speaks of Jewish archons who were appointed before every Jewish New Year.27
22. Justin, Dialogue with Trypho 137, 2. 23. Epiphanius, Panarion 30, 18, 2; see Brooten, Women Leaders, 22; G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 220. 24. Panarion 30, 11, 1. 25. Rajak and Noy, Archisynagogoi, 79. 26. Dialogue on the Life of John Chrysostom 15: Now they say that the corrupter and falsely-called Patriarch of the Jews, every year or even every other year, changes the for a sum of silver. 27. Noy, JIWE, II, 61. See below, note 69. In a rather speculative vein, it might be suggested that the
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Finally, mention should be made of the apocryphal Martyrdom of Peter and Paul, which claims that Jewish archisynagogues, along with pagan priests, were responsible for opposing the apostles Peter and Paul in Rome.28 Thus, the above patristic sources make it quite clear that archisynagogues not only fullled some sort of religious function, but held political and administrative responsibilities as well. Rabbinic Literature. Interestingly, and perhaps surprisingly, rabbinic sources mention the archisynagogue only on occasion. The contexts in which the title appears are most often religious-liturgical, which is quite understandable given the predilections and concerns of the sages. Nonetheless, even this evidence hints at a much wider role for this ocial, who, as noted, is referred to as rosh knesset. There has been some speculation as to which title, the Greek or the Hebrew, was the original and which the derivative.29 As important as such a determination might be, it remains a moot question for the present. While the Greek term is well attested for the rst century c.e., the Hebrew equivalent appears only in the Mishnah, at the beginning of the third century; little can be said of its earlier history. If the mishnaic tradition regarding the rosh knesset in the Temple is authentic (see below), then, at the very least, a rst-century c.e. date is called for; however, even such an assumption would hardly resolve the issue as to which term came rst. Moreover, to assume a correlation between the origin of a term and its rst appearance in a particular source is unwarranted. The earliest context in rabbinic literature associated with the rosh knesset relates to a Torah-reading ceremony in the Temple. Both a azzan and rosh knesset were part of the chain of ocials who transferred the Torah scroll to the high priest or king for reading during the Yom Kippur and Haqhel ceremonies.30 Despite the possible anachronism in associating synagogue-related ocials with Temple proceedings, there is a possibility that this tradition was not entirely devoid of historical basis. We have noted that functions once located at the city-gate were moved elsewhere in the course of the Second Temple period. Regarding Jerusalem, the Temple precincts and the Temple Mount area generally may have incorporated some of the activities formerly associated with the gate area and thus would have included elements of religious worship that had taken place there.31 As the azzan and rosh knesset may already have functioned in some religious capacity at the city-gate, the transference of the Torah-reading ceremony to the Temple, and to synagogues elsewhere, could have involved the participation of persons bearing these titles.
accusation of bribery for public oce was inspired by this practice among many high priests toward the end of the Second Temple period, a memory that may underlie a similar rabbinic tradition that speaks of priests acquiring such positions every twelve months (B Yoma 8b). 28. Acta apostolorum apocrypha (p. 128); see also Juster, Juifs, I, 452 n. 3. 29. G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 220. 30. M Yoma 7, 1; M Sotah 7, 78. 31. See above, Chap. 2.
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Thus, on the rare occasions when the Torah was read in the Temple, it was with the participation of a azzan and rosh knesset who may have come from one of the Jerusalem synagogues or perhaps were formally associated with the Temple. Although the above line of reasoning is admittedly somewhat speculative, it may not be a wholly implausible reconstruction. Whatever the case, the Toseftan tradition of the azzan and rosh knesset being charged with the Torah-reading ceremony in the synagogue clearly points to this positions religious dimension. On occasion, the rosh knesset also read from the Torah,32 and this dovetails neatly with the New Testament evidence. A number of other second-century rabbinic sources reect the generally prominent status of the archisynagogue. One tradition regarding burial customs notes the addition of three cups of wine at a funeral meal in honor of a azzan knesset, rosh knesset, and Rabban Gamaliel.33 In a baraita listing those women who are preferred as wives, the highest consideration is accorded the daughter of a sage, followed by the daughter of one of the great men of the generation ( , i.e., wealthy communal leaders), the daughter of a rosh knesset, the daughter of a charity ocial, and, nally, the daughter of a schoolteacher.34 Two second-century heads of synagogues are mentioned in connection with visiting sages: one Savion of Achziv addressed a halakhic question to Rabban Gamaliel II when the latter visited his town, and the rosh knesset of Nisibis invited R. Judah b. Bathyra to dine with him on the eve of Yom Kippur.35 From the late third century, we have the account of a rosh knesset in Bostra who is described as dragging a bench on the Sabbath in the presence of R. Jeremiah.36 In addition, some Galileans asked R. Isaac Nappa about the proper order in which to call people to the Torah following the Cohen and Levi, to which he responded: after them read sages who are appointed parnasim in the community; after them, sages who are qualied to be appointed parnasim; after them, the sons of sages who function as parnasim; and after them, the rashei knesset; and after them, anyone else. 37 In reviewing these nine dierent rabbinic traditions, which are fairly evenly divided between Palestinian and Babylonian sources (with all but one referring to Palestinian set32. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 359); and Lieberman, TK, loc. cit. 33. Y Berakhot 3, 1, 6a. See also Tractate Semaot 14, 14 (p. 209), for a slightly dierent order; and B Ketubot 8b for a signicantly dierent version, reading parnas instead of archisynagogue. See also Ginzberg, Commentary, II, 6380, esp. 6566. On the association of cups of wine in a banquet setting (festival of Muses) with the various types of teachers (litterator, grammaticus, and rhetor), see Apuleius, Florida 20 (pp. 16869). 34. B Pesaim 49b. 35. T Terumot 2, 13 (p. 115) and Lamentations Rabbah 3, 17 (p. 130), respectively; on the latter, see the editors comments, n. 75; and Beer, Babylonian Exilarchate, 2122 n. 25. 36. B Shabbat 29b. 37. B Gittin 60a.
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tings), it is clear that the rabbis considered the rosh knesset a signicant enough personage to be accorded recognition. Needless to say, his position was always considered inferior to that of the sage, but that is to be expected for any non-rabbinic gure mentioned in these sources. What is of signicance is that of all synagogue-related ocials, the archisynagogue was accorded the highest honors. Of particular interest are the functions described, alluded to, or omitted in these reports. For example, nothing is said of the rosh knesset as a benefactor, unless being named right after the great men of the generation and before the charity ocers is of signicance in this respect, which is doubtful. Several traditions are quite explicit about his religious functions. Even if we were to disregard the mishnaic testimony relating to the Temple, the Toseftan tradition about reading Scriptures and the halakhic query posed to Rabban Gamaliel in Achziv by the local rosh knesset are nevertheless revealing. Of no less importance are other indications we have of the archisynagogues administrative responsibilities. The arranging of seats by the rosh knesset in the synagogue in Bostra and the ranking of the rosh knesset between the communitys most powerful members and its charity ocers may well point to other administrative and political aspects of the archisynagogues duties. Pagan Literature. There are two pagan sources that relate to the archisynagogue, both found in the fourth-century collection of imperial biographies, Scriptores Historiae Augustae. In a letter allegedly written by Hadrian, the following statement is made: those who worship Serapis are, in fact, Christians, and those who call themselves bishops of Christ are, in fact, devotees of Serapis. There is no chief of the Jewish synagogue [i.e., archisynagogue], no Samaritan, no Christian presbyter who is not an astrologer, a soothsayer, or an anointer. Even the Patriarch himself, when he comes to Egypt, is forced by some to worship Serapis, by others to worship Christ. 38 As puzzling as this text may appear to be, several details are nevertheless noteworthy. One is the fact that the archisynagogue is singled out from among all other Jewish ocials; another is the implicit comparison of the archisynagogue with a Christian presbyter. No less intriguing, however, is the well-known reference in the Life of Alexander Severus to a mob scene in Antioch or Alexandria (or both): on the occasion of a certain festival, the people of Antioch, of Egypt, and of Alexandria had annoyed him with jibes as was their custom, calling him a Syrian archisynagogue and a high priest. 39 In contrast to the statement in the previous source, it is not impossible that such an incident, in one form or another, might have occurred during the lifetime of Alexander Severus. As with other members of this dynasty, he, too, was known for his sympathies toward Jews and Judaism,
38. Life of Saturninus 8, 13 (SHA, III, 39899); M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 63738. See also Rajak and Noy (Archisynagogoi, 81), who translate aliptes as wrestling master instead of anointer. On this and the following source, see the comments in Isaac, Orientals and Jews, 108*12*. 39. Life of Alexander Severus 28, 7 (SHA, II, 23435); M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 630.
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as well as for trying to conceal his Syrian origins. Thus, such an accusation would have been especially poignant in both respects.40 The selection of the title archisynagogue for such an insult (even if the account is a fourth-century fabrication) would seem to reect how well knownalbeit in a pejorative waythis title was among the pagan masses. Imperial Legislation. The Theodosian Code makes it quite clear that the archisynagogue was a pivotal communal ocial, and not only in the religious realm. As early as 330, Constantine issued several edicts that addressed the status of Jewish communal and religious ocials: The same Augustus to the priests, the archsynagogues [sic], fathers of synagogues, and the others who serve in the same place. We order that the priests, archsynagogues, fathers of synagogues, and the others who serve in synagogues shall be free from all corporal liturgy. 41 Taken together with another edict issued several days earlier,42 the intention of the emperor becomes quite clear. Jewish clergy, i.e., those who held a leading role in synagogue aairs (those who dedicated themselves with complete devotion to the synagogues of the Jewsibid.), are to be exempt from certain liturgies, as are their pagan and Christian counterparts. A similar law exempting archisynagogues and others from liturgies was issued at the end of the century by the emperors Arcadius and Honorius: The Jews shall be bound to their rites; while we shall imitate the ancients in conserving their privileges, for it was established in their laws and conrmed by our divinity, that those who are subject to the rule of the Illustrious Patriarchs, that is the Archsynagogues, the patriarchs, the presbyters and the others who are occupied in the rite of that religion, shall persevere in keeping the same privileges that are reverently bestowed on the rst clerics of the venerable Christian Law. 43 A third law notes a specic communal function ascribed to the archisynagogue: It is a matter of shameful superstition that the Archsynagogues, the presbyters of the Jews, and those they call apostles, who are sent by the Patriarch on a certain date to demand gold and silver, exact and receive a sum from each synagogue, and deliver it to him. 44
40. Momigliano, Severo Alessandro Archisynagogus, 15153. 41. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 4 (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 135). 42. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 2 (ibid., 134). 43. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 13 (ibid., 202). 44. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 14 (ibid., 216). Moreover, there is reason to believe that the term Primates in Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 8 (ibid., 18788), a reference to the most prestigious personages in the local Jewish community, may indeed mean the archisynagogues: In the complaints of the Jews it was armed that some people are received in their sect on the authority of the judges, against the opposition of the Primates of their Law, who had cast them out by their judgment and will. We order that this injury should be utterly removed, and that a tenacious group in their superstition shall not earn aid from their undue readmission through the authority of judges or of ill-gotten rescript, against the will of their Primates, who are manifestly authorized to pass judgment concerning their religion, under the authority of the Most Renowned and the Illustrious patriarchs.
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Although there seems to be ambiguity regarding the precise role of archisynagogues and elders in this process of tax collectioni.e., they were not sent by the Patriarch to carry out this task, as may have been the case with the apostlesthere is little justication in dismissing this description in its entirety. These archisynagogues were apparently also involved in the collection of monies from their communities, and thus this source has historical signicance for our purposes. Inscriptions. The largest corpus of material regarding the archisynagogue is to be found in inscriptions. Horsley as well as Rajak and Noy have conveniently listed all known examples, which, by their count, total more than thirty inscriptions containing names of about forty persons holding that title. Most of the inscriptions are funerary and thus usually only take note of the fact that the deceased person once held that position. Yet even from this limited context we may cull some additional information regarding this oce. Of especial importance are the dedicatory inscriptions from synagogues that tell us something about the functioning of the archisynagogue.45 Eight such inscriptions exist more than for any other synagogue-related post.46 By way of comparison, seven dedicatory inscriptions mention presbyters, ve (perhaps six) note an archon, and ve a phrontistes.47 The archisynagogues who are mentioned as donors hailed from North Africa, Greece, Asia Minor, Syria, and Palestine. Some are noted as having built or founded the synagogue ( Jerusalem, Teos, Aegina) or as having restored it (Acmonia), others as having contributed a chancel screen (Myndos), a mosaic pavement (Naro), the entrance to the building (Apamea), or a triclinium (Caesarea). Clearly, these inscriptions indicate that an archisynagogue was not infrequently an important donor to the synagogue. However, as noted, it would be a majorand unwarrantedleap to assume, on the basis of this evidence, that this philanthropic dimension was a sine qua non for becoming an archisynagogue 48 or that an archisynagogue functioned only in this capacity. What may have been common and, in many cases, even expected was not necessarily the sole or determinant factor in dening ones position. It is entirely possible that many archisynagogues did not contribute to the synagogue building; otherwise, we might have expected to nd many more such inscriptions, and not only eight. However, this last point is dicult to substantiate, as it rests on an argumentum ex silentio. Moreover, other synagogue ocials and ordinary members also made substantial
45. In addition to the above, see Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, 88 (); Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 243 n. 83; Brooten, Women Leaders, 23., 22930 n. 93. 46. Rajak and Noy list nine, yet the Salamis inscription may be an epitaph. See also Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 85 and esp. p. 76. 47. Presbyter: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 14, 32, 37, 58, 82, 84, 101. Archon: ibid., nos. 11, 33, 37, 100, 101, and possibly 9a. Phrontistes: ibid., nos. 1, 2, 36, 37, 66. 48. Rajak and Noy, Archisynagogoi, 8489.
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contributions toward synagogue-related projects, as did the community as a whole.49 Indeed, the distinction made in rabbinic literature between the great men of the generation and the rosh knesset may, in fact, indicate that the latter was not always the primary benefactor, at least in Palestinian circles. These inscriptions likewise conrm the overall prominence of this oce, as is evidenced in the other sources as well. Not infrequently, a lavish honoric title accompanies the mention of an archisynagogue: the most respected (Teos); the most honored (Apamea); and the most illustrious (Sepphoris, twice). This evidence dovetails nicely with the report in Scriptores Historiae Augustae, noted above, of the pagan mob calling the emperor an archisynagogue, as well as indications in the Theodosian Code of the prominence of this oce. It is also noteworthy that an archisynagogue could hold more than one title. This same person may also have been an archon, presbyter, rabbi, didaskalos, phrontistes, or priest.50 Dual titles, however, were not unique to this oce. A phrontistes, for example, could also have been a pater synagoges, archon, or presbyter.51 Moreover, the position of archisynagogue may have combined with another civilian or military post relating to the larger non-Jewish society. Two known instances of such a combination come from the Danube region. An inscription from Moesia identies one Joses as an archisynagogue and principales, the latter term possibly referring to a military or civilian post.52 From Intercisa, we know of an archisynagogue who was also head of a customs station.53 Furthermore, more than one person could have held the title of archisynagogue at any one time. At Apamea, three local archisynagogues were honored by Ilasios, an archisynagogue in Antioch.54 Acmonia had two archisynagogues and an archon who together undertook the restoration of the building.55 The oce may have been hereditary in some instances, or at least customarily transmitted from one generation to the next within a single family. Such was the case recorded in the Theodotos inscription from Jerusalem,
49. See in general Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, passim; for the Palestinian evidence in particular, see Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 14752, 16874. See also the inscription from Reggio di Calabria in Noy, JIWE, I, no. 139. 50. Archon: Noy, JIWE, II, no. 322 (Rome); ibid., I, no. 20 (Campania). Presbyter: Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 88, no. 731c (Crete). Rabbi: Frey, CIJ, II, no. 1414 (Jerusalem). Didaskalos: G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, no. 113 (Corinth). Phrontistes: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 1 (Aegina); ibid., no. 66 (Caesarea). Priest: ibid., no. 79 (Jerusalem). 51. See, for example, Noy, JIWE, II, nos. 164 and 540; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 37. See also ibid., no. 14. 52. Scheiber, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 10; see also G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 215, no. 20. 53. Scheiber, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 3. 54. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 38. 55. Ibid., no. 33.
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where it is stated that the same family retained leadership in the synagogue for three generations.56 A similar situation, this time lasting two generations, is attested at Venosa.57 Finally, the title may have been used in an honorary sensefor instance, when it was bestowed on a child.58 It is not clear whether archisynagogue for life ( ) was an honorary title or whether its holder actually continued to function in this capacity until death.59 While the non-Jewish epigraphical material referring to archisynagogoi 60 points clearly to their role as patrons, other functions of this oce are also noted. Eusebius, for example, refers to a pagan by the name of Macrianus, describing him as a teacher and archisynagogue of Egyptian magicians;61 as noted, Epiphanius relates that Ebionite leaders were called archisynagogues and presbyters and that these ocials served as teachers and also arranged marriages within the community.62 In summary, our sources refer to the position of archisynagogue in ways that we might have been able to anticipate. Sources with primarily religious concerns, such as rabbinic material, the New Testament, and the church fathers, all emphasize the religious dimension of the oce. Even Imperial legislation, focusing as it does on the Jews as a religious community in the fourth century, addresses this aspect of Jewish life generally, the archisynagogue in particular. Inscriptions, on the other hand, relate mostly to the benefactions of such individuals. But over and above each sources specic concern, we have noted evidence time and again that this oce was charged with more than religious and/or nancial responsibilities. An archisynagogue was looked upon by Jews and non-Jews alike as a leader and representative of his community. Our sources biases should not prevent us from trying to recapture the full scope of his responsibilities in the many far-ung Jewish communities of Late Antiquity. The oce of the Jewish archisynagogue is a fascinating example of the adoption and adaptation of outside inuences. Whatever may have been the origin or derivation of the Hebrew rosh knesset, Jews clearly borrowed the term archisynagogue from their surroundings.63 On the basis of the available evidence (heavily epigraphical, as noted), pagans appear to have used this term largely in a philanthropic vein, i.e., for one who was con56. Ibid., no. 79. 57. Noy, JIWE, I, no. 70. 58. Ibid., no. 53. On other children who were given titles usually reserved for community ocials, see ibid., II, nos. 288 and 337. 59. See, for example, Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 16 (Teos); ibid., no. 33 (Acmonia). Both places are in Asia Minor. 60. Cf. the non-Jewish inscriptions cited in G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 21920; Rajak and Noy, Archisynagogoi, 9293. 61. Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 7, 10, 4 (LCL, II 151). 62. Epiphanius, Panarion 30, 18, 2. 63. TDNT, VII, 84445.
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spicuous in his contributions to an association or organization. Nevertheless, given the unique functions of the synagogue as a communal organization and its all-encompassing role in the lives of the local community, the responsibilities of the Jewish archisynagogue were most probably broader and more comprehensive than those of his pagan namesake. It is doubtful whether such a role was inuenced by previous Jewish communal history, since no comparable synagogue framework existed heretoforeeither in Palestine or the Diaspora. The oce of archisynagogue was therefore a Greco-Roman phenomenon that was signicantly redened when brought into the Jewish context, thus attesting to both the responsiveness and the adaptiveness of these Jewish communities.
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archisynagogue, is noted among those mentioned in the three long inscriptions from this Jewish community, and this, in itself, may be signicant.68 Thus, although we have some interesting information about archons in general, it is impossible to know which refers to a synagogue setting and which to a communal one. For example, in a well-known homily by a Christian writer from around the turn of the fth century, and spuriously ascribed to John Chrysostom, we are told of the Jewish practice of choosing archons in September, on the eve of each Jewish New Year.69 Besides Rome, a handful of dedicatory inscriptions from the area around Greece and Asia Minor (Cyprus, Acmonia, Olbia, and Magnesia [?]) specically mentions archons in connection with synagogues.70 At Elche, archons and presbyters are noted in an inscription on the synagogues mosaic oor, which may indicate a special place of seating for both of these groups.71 Some interesting facts may be learned from the evidence in Rome, where, as noted, the archons were in all probability seen as part of the synagogue ocialdom. People could serve as archons on more than one occasion, and there were those who held that position for two and three terms.72 Special titles such as (archon of all honors), mellarchon, and exarchon are also noted.73 Furthermore, the archon is at times mentioned as an ocial functioning alongside the archisynagogue (e.g., at Acmonia).74 On occasion, however, one and the same person held both titles (e.g., in Rome and Capua).75 Several examples in the New Testament appear to confuse the two: Mark and Luke-Acts speak of an archisynagogue (see above), but Luke also uses the term archon of the synagogue. 76 Matthew refers to Jairus simply as archon, and Mark calls him an archisynagogue. 77 Moreover, as noted above, Codex D of Acts 14:2 refers to the archisynagogues of the Jews and the archons of the synagogue. Whether these discrepancies are the result of ignorance, sloppiness, or variant traditions, or whether the reality itself was as uid as some of our sources seem to indicate, is dicult to ascertain. It may well be that in smaller communities these various positions were combined, whereas in the cities they generally designated distinct positions.
68. See above, Chap. 4. 69. De solstitiis et aequinoctiis, as referred to in Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 174; Talley, Origins of the Liturgical Year, 9294; and Wilmart, Homlies latines de Chrysostome, 31617. 70. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 9, 11, 33, 85. 71. Noy, JIWE, I, no. 181. 72. See, for example, ibid., II, nos. 98, 164, 165, 540. 73. Archon of all honors: ibid., nos. 121, 164, 259; the precise meaning of this title remains unclear. Mellarchon: one designated to become an archon. The term appears six times; see ibid., 538. Exarchon: ibid., nos. 2, 4; on possible meanings, see ibid., 1112. 74. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 33. 75. Rome: Noy, JIWE, II, no. 322. Capua: ibid., I, no. 20. 76. Luke 8:41, 49. 77. Matt. 9:18, 23; Mark 5:22, 38.
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Pater Synagoges
This term appears in only a few locales, most particularly in Rome, where it is mentioned in nine inscriptions.78 It also occurs twice in Mauretania 79 and in the monumental inscription from Stobi. The title takes a somewhat dierent form elsewhere. In an inscription from Mantinea, for instance, Aurelius Elpidus is referred to as the father of the people ( ) and is accorded this title for life ( ), while in Smyrna, one Irenopolos is called an elder and father of the community. 80 The word pater appears alone in an inscription found near Ostia, and it almost assuredly refers to the pater synagoges (see below). In a deed of enfranchisement from Egypt dating to the year 291, one of the parties putting up the ransom money was Aurelius Justus, identied as a pater synagoges and city councillor from Ono in Roman Palestine.81 Finally, the title patres synagogarum is mentioned in an edict dated to 330 in the Theodosian Code (see below). There is general agreement that this title was essentially honoric, denoting a major patron and benefactor of the community,82 and was used similarly in pagan contexts; Roman municipal governments and collegia also had their patres.83 Moreover, the use of the term father as a title of honor and respect has deep roots in ancient Judaism. It appears in the Bible, most memorably in Elishas cry to Elijah when the latter ascended to heaven (II Kgs. 2:12; 6:21), and the Maccabean martyr Razis is referred to as father of the Jews. 84 Furthermore, it is dicult to know whether the use of this term with reference to specic sages had a similar honoric meaning or whether it was merely part of the actual name (e.g., Abba Saul, Abba Yosi, Abba Eliezer).85 Indeed, the use of the term for the head of a rabbinic court, av bet din, not only carries with it an honoric dimension but is also a clear indication of status and authority.86 Yet, despite the consensus that we are essentially dealing here with a position of honor, there are a number of sources that suggest this may not always have been the case. The Stobi inscription, which mentions the pater synagoges Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos,
78. Noy, JIWE, II, 538. See also Schrer, Die Gemeindeverfassung, 2930; Juster, Les Juifs, I, 449 n. 2; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 18688. 79. Le Bohec, Inscriptions juives, nos. 74, 79. 80. Mantinea: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 9; White, Social Origins, 35960; Smyrna: ibid., no. 14. 81. Tcherikover et al., CPJ, III, no. 473. 82. Juster, Les Juifs, I, 44849; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 369; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 18688; Brooten, Women Leaders, 64.; Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 137 n. 11; Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 24950. 83. Schrer, Die Gemeindeverfassung, 2930; White, Building Gods House, 5758, 174 n. 134; Noy, JIWE, I, 34, 91, 146; Campagnano-Di Segni, Involvement, 32526. 84. II Macc. 14, 37. 85. See, for example, M Betzah 3, 8; M Avot 2, 8; M Middot 2, 56; M Miqvaot 2, 10. 86. Mantel, Studies, 10229.
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conveys the impression that this individual played a crucial and pivotal role in synagogue aairs generally. However, the inscription itself never states this explicitly, and what is recorded could well t the activities of any wealthy patron. Nevertheless, both the thrust and tone of this inscription do seem to point to Claudius deep involvement in local synagogue life.87 Another indication of the paters prominence in synagogue aairs is found in an inscription from Castel Porziano, near Ostia.88 We learn that the transfer of property to the gerousiarch Gaius Julius Justus for purposes of building a family tomb was done through the eorts of three ocials, the rst of whom was one Livius Dionysius, pater. The word pater used here without the accompanying synagoges may, in fact, be a shortened form of this title. In any case, it seems that Livius involvement was more than merely titular or honorary, and he presumably functioned as part of a local governing board charged with executing this transaction. The most important source attesting to the role of the pater in synagogue aairs noted above in another contextis the Theodosian Code. A decree from 330 c.e. includes the following: We order that the priests, archsynagogues, fathers of synagogues, and the others who serve in synagogues shall be free from all corporal liturgy. 89 The mention of fathers of synagogues alongside other functionaries, such as the priests (see below, Chap. 15) and archisynagogues, would seem to indicate a position of responsibility for the patres. This inference is reinforced by the phrase and the others who serve in synagogues and conrmed by the exemption of the aforementioned from all liturgies. Unless we dismiss this evidence as totally misconstrued, and this would appear to be an unwarranted judgment, it must be conceded that such a title included, at least on occasion, a variety of administrative duties. As noted, the bulk of epigraphical references to pater appear in connection with synagogues in Rome, specically the synagogues of the Hebrews, Calcaresians, Vernaclesians, Elaeans, and Campesians.90 It may be of signicance that most titles connected with the last-named synagogue are either pater or mater. Might this mean that the heads of the Campesian synagogue routinely bore this title? A pater may have held other communal positions at some point, such as one Domnus who was referred to as a pater, a three-time archon, and a two-time phrontistes.91 On an87. On the Stobi inscription, see above, Chap. 8. Such an inference was made by White (Building Gods House, 71): Yet, Polycharmos himself continued to exercise leadership in both social and religious matters as pater synagoges. More generally, however, he notes: Unlike other oces in the synagogue, pater and mater seem to have been positions of high status earned chiey through conspicuous acts of generosity (ibid., 81). 88. Noy, JIWE, I, no. 18. See also White, Synagogue and Society, 4248. 89. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 4 (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 135). 90. Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 187; Noy, JIWE, II, 538. 91. Noy, JIWE, II, no. 540.
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other occasion, a pater also served as an archon.92 Mnaseas (Menasseh?) was noted as a student of the wise or sage ( ) and father of synagogues, 93 and Pancharius, who died at the ripe old age of 110, was father of the synagogue of Elea . . . who loved his people and the Law. 94 As noted, Aurelius Elpidus of Mantinea was referred to as a father of the people, forever. 95 Mention should be made of a most unusual instance of the use of the term pater in connection with Theodorus, head of the Jewish community of Mago on the island of Minorca. In the wake of the religious fervor accompanying the bringing of St. Stephans bones to the island (418 c.e.), the local Christian community, under the leadership of the bishop Severus, forced the Jews540 in numberto convert, turning their synagogue into a church. While the ocial title of Theodorus was pater patrum, he was also referred to as legis doctor (clearly a religious role, apparently a Diasporan equivalent of rabbi) and is said to have held all the oces in the town council, including those of defensor and patronus.96
Mater Synagoges
The same dilemmas regarding the term pater synagoges face us when considering the term mater synagoges. Was this primarily an honoric term as well, or did it at times connote a position of substance within the community? This question is even more dicult to answer with regard to mater, owing to the fewer number of sources at our disposal. Let us review the evidence at hand. Six inscriptions note this title in one form or another, three in Greek and three in Latin. All come from Italy: three from Rome, two from Venosa in the south, and one from Brescia in the north.97
[ ] For Coelia Paterna, mother of the synagogue of the Brixians. [ ] Here rests Alexandria the fatheress [pateressaa feminine form of pater], who lived more or less . . . years. Peace. [ ] Here lies Faustina the mother, wife of Auxanius, father and patron of the city. [ ] Here lies Simplica, mother of the synagogue, who loved her husband . . . the synagogue for his own spouse. [ ] Here lies [. . . ]ia Marcella, mother of the synagogue of the Augustesians. May [she?] be remembered [?]. In peace here sleep. [ ] Veturia Paula, placed in her eternal home, who lived 86 years 6 months, a proselyte for 16 years
92. Ibid., no. 210. 93. Ibid., no. 544. 94. Ibid., no. 576. 95. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 9. In Roman society, town councillors were sometimes referred to as fathers of the dmos, the plebs; see Brown, Power and Persuasion, 82. 96. Hunt, St. Stephan in Minorca, 10623; Millar, Jews of the Graeco-Roman Diaspora, 119. 97. Noy, JIWE, I, nos. 5, 63, 116; II, nos. 251, 542, 577.
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The title mater appears to have taken one of a number of forms. A woman might be designated simply mater or mater synagoges, without any further identication. On the other hand, three women are given this title with respect to specic synagogues, that of the Augustesians, the Campesians, the Volumnesians, and the Brixians (nos. 1, 5, and 6). Most unusual is the case of Veturia Paula (no. 6), who was mother of two Roman synagogues. Given her advanced age at conversion, it would seem likely that her title was strictly honorary and did not reect an active responsibility in either of the synagogues.
Presbyter (Elder)
There is no question that the presbyter was an integral part of the synagogue ocialdom in many locales. Some thirty inscriptions from sites stretching across the breadth of the Empire take note of this oce, from Elche in Spain to Dura Europos in Syria.98 Nevertheless, despite the geographical dispersion, use of the term tends to be concentrated in certain areas, for example, in Asia Minor (including Cyprus and Rhodes) and southern Italy (particularly Venosa and Sicily). It is noticeably absent from Rome and Egypt and appears only infrequently in North Africa, Syria, and Palestine. The same holds true for references to women elders (presbytera). Four references come from Venosa and Malta, one each from Crete, Thrace, and North Africa, and a possible, though disputed, reference from Rome.99 This title appears as early as the Theodotos inscription of rst-century Jerusalem (referring here almost certainly to the rst century b.c.e.) and continues down to the end of antiquity. Nevertheless, it is dicult to pinpoint precisely the function of this oce. Was it administrative, nancial, religious-liturgical, all three, or perhaps a combination of any two? The specic denition of this title may well have diered from place to place, as the prominence of elders is attested in all societies from hoary antiquity. In Jewish tradition, the term is equivalent to the Hebrew word zaqen (= elder), which is featured prominently in biblical and post-biblical literature, including rabbinic sources.100 In the last, the term appears in a variety of contexts but lacks specicity regarding denition and framework. The looseness of this term may be compared to that of archon, which, as noted, could
98. Frey, CIJ, II, nos. 790, 792, 800, 801, 931, 1137, 1277, 1404; Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, nos. 731c, 731f; idem, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 14, 32, 37, 38, 58, 82, 84; Noy, JIWE, I, nos. 59, 62, 71, 75, 148, 149, 157, 163, 181; Robert, Nouvelles inscriptions, 57; Le Bohec, Inscriptions juives, no. 4. On an inscription found in Binyamina, near Caesarea, naming Judah the presbyter, see Herman, Jewish Tombstone, 16061. 99. Brooten, Women Leaders, 4146; Noy, JIWE, I, nos. 59, 62, 163; for the latters reservations regarding Rome, see ibid., II, no. 24. 100. TDNT, VI, 65261; Brooten, Women Leaders, 4652. For early Christian literature, see TDNT, VI, 66183.
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have been applied to a number of roles. It has often been assumed that the council of elders (presbyters) was the chief governing board of a community or congregation, from which archons were selected to run daily aairs.101 However, there may also have been situations in which the governing council was composed of archons (as at Berenice), and smaller communities may have dispensed with such a body. The case against pressing for too neat a denition is vividly demonstrated in several inscriptions from Dura Europos. One of the heads of the community, Samuel the priest, son of Yedaya, is referred to as an archon in an Aramaic inscription and as a presbyter in a Greek one.102 Here, at least, these terms seem to have been interchangeable. A presbyter could have been a benefactor of a synagogue and may have been one of its founders.103 He or she might have borne other titles simultaneously, such as pater, phrontistes, or archisynagogue, as in the case of Sophia of Gortyn (see below, Chap. 14).104 As a group, presbyters are listed alongside archisynagogues and archons and, as noted above, appear to have occupied special seats along with the archons in the Elche synagogue.105 One of the few rabbinic sources that places the elders rmly within a synagogue context concerns seating arrangements. The Tosefta has preserved several intriguing descriptions of the seating within a synagogue, wherein elders were accorded a special place. The elders in the rst-century Alexandrian synagogue are said to have occupied seventyone gilded chairs.106 Another tradition speaks of elders seated with their backs to the Jerusalem-oriented wall while facing the congregation.107 However, the precise role of these elders in the synagogue context is never articulated. Three edicts from the Theodosian Code clearly reveal that the presbyters held a recognized role in synagogue life. The rst is dated to 330: Those who dedicated themselves with complete devotion to the synagogues of the Jews, to the Patriarchs or to the Presbyters . . . it is they who preside over the law, [and they who] shall continue to be exempt from all liturgies, personal as well as civil. 108 The second edict, issued by Arcadius in his and Honorius name in 397, lists those who were subject to the Patriarchs rule and were devoted to Jewish rites. Presbyters are listed along with the archisynagogues and Patriarchs, and all three are granted exemptions similar to those enjoyed by the Christian clergy.109 A third edict, from 399, mentions presby101. See, for example, Baron, Jewish Community, I, 99. 102. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 26368, 277; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 58. 103. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 32, 37, 58, 79. 104. Pater: ibid., no. 14. Phrontistes: ibid., no. 37. Archisynagogue: Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, no. 731c. 105. G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, IV, 215, no. 23; Noy, JIWE, I, no. 181. On Elche, see above, Chap. 8. As noted (above, note 23), according to Epiphanius, leadership of the Ebionites was in the hands of archisynagogues and presbyters. 106. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273); and above, Chap. 4. 107. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360). 108. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 2 (Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, no. 9). 109. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 13 (ibid., no. 27).
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ters along with archisynagogues and apostles, who were charged with the collection of taxes on behalf of the Patriarch.110 Finally, in his famous Novella from 553, Justinian refers to synagogue leaders who might attempt to hinder the implementation of his law. Among the three ocials named, one was a presbyter.111 One can thus safely assume from the above that in many places throughout Late Antiquity presbyters played a central role in the religious and administrative life of the synagogue.
Grammateus
Although some have dened the grammateus as a scholar of sorts, probably inuenced by the interpretation of Hebrew sofer (= scribe),112 the title has generally been understood in a secretarial vein, as were similar titles of ocials in a Greco-Roman context.113 Possible tasks would have included responsibility for keeping records of ocial meetings and decisions, handling correspondence, managing the archives, compiling synagogue membership lists, and serving as a notary. Our knowledge of this oce is radically skewed, as practically all of our evidence comes from the Roman catacomb inscriptions. Of the twenty-seven known inscriptions mentioning a grammateus, twenty-six derive from these epitaphs (the remaining one was found in Bithynia).114 Six of the Roman grammate are explicitly associated with a synagoguetwo with the synagogue of the Siburesians and one each with those of the Vernaclesians, Augustesians, Calcaresians, and Secenians. Of the more than one hundred inscriptions recorded by Lifshitz in his Donateurs et fondateurs, no grammateus is listed as a benefactor. Since evidence for this oce stems from epitaphs, and not from dedicatory inscriptions, it may be concluded that, by and large, these ocials were not among the wealthy members of the congregation. Yet, as elsewhere, one can nd an exception to this rule. In the dedicatory inscription from Bithynia, for example, the grammateus also served as the presbyter and head of some sort of council of elders.115 The grammateus was not necessarily an older person, as the ages noted on the epitaphs range from twenty-two to seventy.116 On occasion, this title was passed down from generation to generation, with sons following in their fathers footsteps. Children were also
110. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 14 (ibid., no. 30). 111. Novella 146 (ibid., no. 66). 112. Schrer, Die Gemeindeverfassung, 30. 113. Juster, Les Juifs, I, 44748; Frey, CIJ, I, xciixciv; Baron, Jewish Community, I, 1023; Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 18386; Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 25153. 114. Noy, JIWE, II, 538; see also Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 183 n. 2; Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 252 n. 130. On the epitaph from Bithynia, see Frey, CIJ, I, no. 800. 115. Frey, CIJ, I, no. 800. 116. Leon, Jews of Ancient Rome, 185; Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 252.
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given this title, presumably because of their fathers position and perhaps with the intention that they would one day have the title in their own right.117 That such a title might be bestowed for this reason is attested in an inscription noting the death of a twentyfour-year-old referred to as a mellogrammateus, i.e., a future grammateus.118 In one unusual case, the grandfather Honoratus was a grammateus, as were his son Petronius and his grandson (by his other son, Rufus), also named Honoratus.119
Phrontistes
The oce of phrontistes appears to have been administrative in nature, referring to one who manages or oversees some sort of facility.120 The position is attested at a number of sites in Palestine (Caesarea, Jaa), Egypt, Pamphylia, Porto, and Rome.121 At times, this oce, too, might be combined with another. Beryllos of Caesarea, for instance, was both phrontistes and archisynagogue; in Rome, Eupsychius was an archon on two occasions, an archon of all honor and a phrontistes.122 In another Roman epitaph already mentioned, Domnus was a phrontistes for two terms, as well as an archon for three and the pater synagoges of the Vernaclesian synagogue.123 A phrontistes could thus have made substantial contributions to the synagogue building, as attested in the above-noted dedicatory inscriptions. Perhaps the best indication of the possible roles of this ocial is to be found in two inscriptions from Aegina.124 Although the noun phrontistes is not used there, its verbal form is invoked twice. The rst reference is to the archisynagogue Theodoros, who served (phrontisas) the synagogue for four years and built the structure from its foundations. In the second inscription, Theodoros the Younger (a son?) oversaw ( phrontizon) the laying of a mosaic oor in the synagogue.
azzan
The most prominent functionary in the Palestinian synagogue, as least as reected in rabbinic literature, was the azzan.125 He clearly was not the most powerful or inuential ocer, and although answerable to others, such as the archisynagogue, sage, or the
117. For example, see Noy, JIWE, II, no. 255. 118. Ibid., no. 231; see also no. 404. 119. Ibid., nos. 223, 256, 257. 120. Frey, CIJ, I, xcii. 121. Ibid., II, nos. 918, 919; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 36, 37, 66; Horbury and Noy, Jewish Inscriptions, no. 146; Noy, JIWE, I, no. 17; II, nos. 164, 540. 122. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 66; Noy, JIWE, II, no. 164. 123. Noy, JIWE, II, no. 540. 124. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 1, 2. 125. On the azzan generally, see Schrer, History, II, 438; Juster, Les Juifs, I, 454; S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 12131. See also Landman, Cantor, 3.; Sky, Redevelopment, 1136.
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community at large, he was a pivotal gure in many synagogue-related activities. The azzan was charged with a wide variety of tasks, and oftenespecially within smaller communitiesthis position was combined with others. The account of the Simonias community asking R. Judah I to nd someone who would serve as a preacher, judge, azzan, teacher of Bible and Oral Law, and otherwise attend to all our needs is revealing in this regard.126 Two generations later, the Jewish community of Bostra similarly turned to Resh Laqish in the mid third century in search of someone who could be a preacher, judge, teacher of Bible, azzan, and attend to all our other needs. 127 That a room was often set aside in a synagogue building for a azzans personal needs serves as a clear indication of the extensive amount of time he was expected to spend there.128 While a azzan was crucial to the synagogue enterprise, rabbinic sources portray him in a distinctly secondary role. In one tradition, the azzan is ranked after the sage and the teacher, ahead of only the am ha-aretznot a complimentary position in light of the rabbinic attitude toward this last-mentioned group.129 Given his multifaceted role, it should not be surprising, then, that the azzan was often perceived, by sages at least, as overstepping his authority. One rabbinic statement atly states that the azzan should not assume authority ( 031.) In one midrash, the following statement is ascribed to God: Pay attention to the teachers of Bible, azzanim, and police [guards] that stand before you, that they may not become arrogant, and dont raise their wages and thus place a burden on the community. 131 Contrastingly, in what may be a more popular rather than rabbinically inspired tradition, the azzan is regarded with considerable deference. One tannaitic tradition (noted
126. Y Yevamot 12, 6, 13a. An abbreviated version of this same tradition, which, however, excludes the word azzan, is found in Genesis Rabbah 81, 2 (p. 969). 127. Y Sheviit 6, 1, 36d; Deuteronomy Rabbah, Vaetanan (p. 60). Note the slightly dierent listing in the latter source: teacher of Bible and Oral Law, azzan, scribe ( ,)and involved [alternatively: accomplished] in all matters. See comments in Deuteronomy Rabbah (ed. Lieberman, n. 16) and particularly the reference in Leviticus Rabbah 23, 4 (pp. 53132). See also an inscription from Apamea where the azzan also served as the local deacon (); see Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 40. See also Mouterde and Jalabert, Inscriptions, IV, no. 1321; Robert, Epitaphes juives, 394. 128. B Eruvin 55b, 74b. 129. M Sotah 9, 15; B Sotah 49ab. Note the variants listed in the edition of the Complete Israeli TalmudSotah, II, 35354; and comments in J. N. Epstein, Introduction to the Mishnaic Text, 976. Later on, these two categories (azzan and teacher) are coupled in exegetical (e.g., Y Sanhedrin 13, 9, 23d; B Shabbat 56a) and theoretical (e.g., B Sanhedrin 17b) contexts. 130. Genesis Rabbah 79, 20 (p. 950); Yalqut Shimoni, Genesis, 133 (p. 682). 131. Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 21:1 (p. 454). In a similar vein, see also the comment by R. Elazar regarding a azzans behavior (Y Berakhot 5, 9c). Also relevant is the instruction given to the azzan, Bar Ulla (also referred to as R. Ulla), by R. Yosi on what to do when one or two Torah scrolls were available for separate readings; see Y Yoma 7, 1, 44b; Y Megillah 4, 5, 75b; Y Sotah 7, 6, 22a; Tractate Soferim 11, 3 (p. 220).
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above) speaks of additional cups of wine that were to be added to a funerary meal in honor of a (local) azzan, a rosh knesset, and in memory of Rabban Gamaliel.132 In addition, synagogue inscriptions naming a azzan note that he either contributed to the building or held oce when a certain repair or addition was made.133 Thus, although such evidence is severely limited, it would appear that in some cases the azzan enjoyed greater esteem in the Jewish community at large than is often conveyed in rabbinic sources. We know practically nothing about the individuals who served as azzanim. On only two occasions is the name of a particular azzan mentioned in the sources.134 In inscriptions, however, a number of azzanim are noted; Nemeas in Apamea, Yoezer at orvat Ammudim, Judah at Aphek, and Yoanan at En Gedi.135 Not surprisingly, each of these names is of Jewish origin.136 Presumably, Nemeas was important enough a personage that this inscription at least was dated to his ministry ( ), as was the case with a very distinguished archisynagogue in Apamea as well as a presbyter, accountant, and administrator in the synagogue of Sid.137 In the above-mentioned inscription from Aphek, the azzan proclaims: I am Judah the azzan. Similar to other oces at the time, the position of azzan may also have been hereditary, although evidence for this is only to be found in an eleventh-century divorce document stemming from the Jewish community in Jaa.138 An ocial bearing the title azzan is mentioned in a number of traditions relating to the pre-70 era; at this time at least, the position seems to parallel that of the attendant () in the pagan temple of the Hellenistic and pre-Hellenistic eras and the and deacon of the early Empire.139 As noted above with regard to the archisynagogos, the azzan is mentioned as having functioned in a Temple setting, handing the Torah scroll to the rosh knesset on two dierent ceremonial occasions: (1) on Yom Kippur, before the high priest read the Torah portion pertaining to the day, and (2) before the
132. See above, note 33. Whether the azzan had some specic function with regard to burial is unknown. See, however, Zlotnick (Tractate Mourning, 169), who suggests that the azzan attended to the needs of the dead. 133. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 20, 28, and p. 12; Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 40. See also Barag et al., Second Season of Excavations at En Gedi, 53. 134. Bar Ulla is mentioned as the azzan of the Babylonian synagogue in Sepphoris (see above, note 131) and R. Zenon is noted as holding this oce as well (see below, note 162). 135. See above, note 133. 136. The name Nemeas, written in Greek, is undoubtedly equivalent to the Hebrew Nehemiah. See Roth-Gerson, Jews of Syria, 28788. 137. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 38, 37, respectively. 138. See Margoliot, Palestinian Halakhah, 122. 139. Dion, Synagogues et temples, 6872. See also Josephus use of the term when referring to a Temple functionary in the time of Pompey (War I, 153). On the similarities between the synagogue azzan on the one hand and the terms and deacon () on the other, see TDNT, II, 8993, esp. 91; VIII, 53044. These titles are most often regarded as synonymous; see Schrer, History, II, 438; C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 50; S. J. D. Cohen, From the Maccabees to the Mishnah, 217.
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king read from the Torah at the Haqhel ceremony, at the close of a sabbatical year.140 This Temple azzan was said to have attended to the priests daily wardrobe, taken charge of lulavim left on the Temple premises overnight during the Sukkot festival, and generally kept order.141 azzanim purportedly accompanied local delegations of priests () and non-priests ( )to Jerusalem when the former were to ociate in Temple ceremonies.142 With regard to the rst-century synagogue, Luke takes note of one who took the book of Prophets from Jesus when the latter had nished reading.143 Finally, the azzan of this early period appears to have been in charge of other details of the Torah-reading ceremony, as already noted in the tradition regarding the Alexandrian synagogue, where he signaled the congregation with handkerchiefs when it was time for them to respond to the Torah benedictions.144 Since all of the above sources are themselves post-70 in origin, the question naturally arises as to whether they are historically reliable. Are we perhaps dealing with anachronistic traditions, which may tell us more about the tradents post-70 setting or what they imagined to have been the case earlier, rather than what actually took place in the pre-70 years? To be sure, there can be little, if any, certitude of these traditions historical reliability. Nevertheless, there may indeed be a historical basis for some, if not most, of the above traditions. Such a possibility stems from a number of considerations. First of all, this titleor its parallelsappears in a wide variety of independent sources (rabbinic literature, the New Testament, and possibly a Ptolemaic inscription), a fact that, in itself, may lend some credence to these traditions. In addition, the argument of anachronism is a double-edged sword. If a phenomenon is acknowledged to have existed from the second century on, why dismiss, a priori, evidence that it may have existed in the rst century as well? Why assume that such an oce emerged specically in the post-70 period and did not exist beforehand? As regards the Temple customs noted above, the situation is admittedly more complex. The appearance of a azzan in such a context is admittedly unexpected. Yet, the fact remains that it is mentioned, and here one would be hard pressed to make a case for anachronism. Nothing resembling these two ceremonies existed in the post-70 period, nor is the azzan mentioned as having functioned in a later synagogue context in any way remotely like the one described with regard to the Temple. Moreover, would it be more cogent to assume that the term azzan was retrojected from later synagogue usage onto the Temple setting, rather than to posit that such an ocial may have also functioned in the Temple, as in parallel pagan contexts? At the very least, we might thus conclude that
140. Yom Kippur: M Yoma 7, 1; M Sotah 7, 7; Haqhel: M Sotah 7, 8. 141. M Tamid 5, 3; M Sukkah 4, 4; and Avot de R. Nathan, A, 35 (p. 106). 142. T Bikkurim 2, 8 (p. 292); and Lieberman, TK, II, 848. The term used here may indeed be anachronistic. The parallel in M Bikkurim 3, 2, mentions a ( appointee) instead of a azzan. 143. Luke 4:20. 144. T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273) and parallels.
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there seems to be some degree of historicity in these traditions; they cannot be summarily dismissed as irrelevant for the early period. In the post-70 era, the centrality of the azzan in synagogue worship is especially evident in the Torah-reading ceremony. At every stage of this ritual, which remained focal in the worship service, the azzan played a key role. According to the Tosefta, the azzan and the archisynagogue would choose the people who would read from the Torah. The azzan would then tell the Torah reader when to begin,145 and during the reading itself, according to one tradition, he would recite each verse, after which the person selected to read from the Torah would repeat it. This, following Lieberman, is the meaning of the phrase : one stands [next to the azzan] and the azzan recites each verse beforehand until he has read [the required verses]. 146 Neither the azzan nor the archisynagogue would read from the Torah on a regular basis, but only in special circumstances, for they were, in essence, charged with distributing this honor among others.147 In addition, the azzan was responsible for such tasks as taking the book of Prophets when the reader had nished, rolling the scroll, or replacing one with another if the days reading so required.148 In second-century sources, we read of the azzan being called upon to orchestrate other public ceremonies as well. A special moment in the synagogue liturgy was the priestly blessing, and it was the azzan who told the priests when to commence (941.) As in the Torah-reading ceremony, the azzan would recite the priestly blessing in a low voice to aid the priests. In describing where and how the priests and azzan were usually positioned in the synagogue, the Tosefta relates: And as the priests raised their hands [for the blessing], they face the people and their backs are turned to the holy [i.e., Jerusalem]. The azzan of the synagogue faces the holy and all the people face the holy. 150 In yet another public framework, during a fast in time of drought, the azzan might announce to the assembled priests when they should sound the shofar. Such a fast-day ceremony took place in second-century Galilee under the auspices of several sages. However, this practice met with opposition from other rabbis, possibly because they found the emulation of certain Temple practices objectionable.151 By the early third century, we read of the active role played by the azzan in public
145. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 359); and Lieberman, TK, V, 119697. 146. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360); and comment to line 77 in Lieberman, TK, V, 119899. On a possible reference (albeit requiring a textual emendation) to a azzan functioning as both reader and translator, see Y Megillah 4, 1, 74d; and comments in York, Targum in the Synagogue and the School, 76 n. 6. 147. See above, note 145. 148. See above, notes 131 and 143. See Rashis denition of a azzan as ( servant of the congregation) in his commentary to B Sukkah 51b. 149. SifreNumbers 39 (p. 43). 150. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360). 151. T Taanit 1, 13 (p. 327). See also B Rosh Hashanah 27a; B Taanit 16b; as well as Alon, Studies, I, 108; Miller, Studies, 10315; D. Levine, Temple Prayer, 1028.
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prayer. The Tosefta account of the azzan facing the holy may indicate that he led the congregation in the recitation of the Amidah.152 Other sources corroborate this role. One reports on a azzan in the southern part of the country who served as a prayer leader and whose rendition of the opening paragraph of the Amidah was not to the liking of several visiting sages.153 A later source reports that the azzan is required to recite the Qedushah prayer in the Amidah of minor festivals (i.e., Hanukkah, the New Moons, and the intermediate days of festivals).154 The azzan would at times ask others to lead in prayer. This was not always an easy task, particularly when someone refused and the azzan became overly insistent.155 Toward the end of Late Antiquity, we read of a azzan approaching mourners following the Mussaf (Additional) service, reciting for them a special prayer followed by the recitation of the Qaddish.156 There also appears to have been a custom of oering special praise for a groom, and it was the azzan who may have ociated in this capacity as well. In any case, he is specically mentioned as blessing the bride under the bridal canopy.157 On several occasions, as reported in Tractate Soferim, a azzan is referred to as one who recites prayers publicly and is duly instructed as to what to say on various occasions.158 We have already noted above 159 the custom of posting two people on either side of the azzan while the latter leads the congregation in prayer, a practice that may have evolved from the fast-day ceremonies rst described in tannaitic literature. The signicance of this practice remains elusive. Was it strictly a ceremonial gesture or was there some functional purpose, as, for example, having people on hand to serve as prompters.160 Although certainty is elusive, it appears that the status and functions of the azzan evolved signicantly over these centuries. We have only snippets of information regarding his role, and thus any suggested reconstruction taking into account chronological and geographical distinctions is doomed from the outset to be largely speculative. Nevertheless, we may safely claim that the azzanat least in Jewish Palestineremained the quintessential synagogue functionary throughout Late Antiquity. This appears to be reected in an interesting parallel regarding the cups of wine used at funerary meals, re152. See above, note 150. 153. Y Berakhot 9, 1, 12d. See also Midrash on Psalms 19, 2 (p. 82b); and below, Chap. 16. 154. Tractate Soferim 20, 5 (p. 345). See also the mention of a super orans dating back to fth- or sixthcentury Spain, which probably refers to a chief cantor of the local synagogue (Lifshitz, Prolegomenon, 58, no. 665a). 155. Y Berakhot 5, 3, 9c. 156. Tractate Soferim 19, 9 (p. 336). 157. Ibid.; Midrash Hagadol, Genesis 24:60 (p. 408). 158. Tractate Soferim 10, 6 (p. 216); 20, 5 (p. 345). 159. See above, Chap. 9. 160. Tractate Soferim 14, 9 (p. 263). The custom of having three people standing at certain times during the prayer service is well attested; see Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Beshala, 1 (pp. 18081); PRK 3 (p. 36); Pirqei de R. Eliezer 44. See also Bchler, Types of Jewish-Palestinian Piety, 21617.
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ferred to above. Whereas the Bavli tradition speaks of the town azzan and the parnas, Palestinian sources (the Yerushalmi and at least substantial parts of Tractate Semaot) refer to the synagogue azzan and the rosh knesset.161 As the synagogue developed new liturgical expressions, so did the azzan assume additional functions. As prayer and piyyut began to occupy an ever greater role in synagogue worship, the azzan became instrumental in the implementation of these components. Whether his role with regard to the Torah reading remained the same in Late Antiquity is unclear. Signicantly, perhaps, earlier sources emphasize the Torah-reading function; later ones focus more on the liturgical components of prayer and piyyut. Is this because the focus of the azzans activities changed? Or did prayer and piyyut begin to replace the Torah reading as the central worship component? Perhaps it was more a matter of editorial preference. Since these two forms of worship (prayer and piyyut) were the most recent developments in synagogue liturgy, they therefore may have commanded more attention in later sources. There is no way of making a determination in this regard, at least for the present. Besides the specic liturgical functions, the azzan was also charged with making announcements to the people assembled in the synagogue. He is reported to have explicitly done so in the rabbinic academy, although this is one of the very few times a azzan is mentioned as having functioned in this setting.162 Two late sources report that the azzan made announcements of public concern in the synagogue, such as acknowledging charitable donations or announcing a stolen object.163 Regarding the latter, Judah, son of (?) R. Huna, reported that his sandals were once taken from the synagogue (while praying barefoot?): If I had not gone to the synagogue, my sandals would not have disappeared. 164 Continuing a practice from Second Temple Jerusalem, when priests would announce the beginning and end of the Sabbath and festivals by sounding a trumpet from the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount, in Late Antiquity it was the azzans duty to similarly usher in these festive days from a high roof of the town.165 He would sound
161. See above, note 33. See also the later tradition explaining the practice of reciting twenty-two verses for the haftarah: twenty-one verses correspond with the seven people called to the Torah (three verses per person), and one additional verse is in honor of the synagogue azzan (Tractate Soferim 13, 15 [p. 250]). 162. As, for example, one R. Zenon at Yavneh around the turn of the second century; see Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7d; Y Taanit 4, 1, 67d; as well as Tanuma, Lekh Lekha, 10 (p. 35a). 163. Announcing donations: This late tradition, preserved in al-Nakawas fourteenth-century Menorat Ha-maor (p. 27), is presumably based on early traditions. Announcing a stolen object: Yalqut Shimoni, Leviticus, 471 (p. 157). 164. Y Bava Metzia 2, 9, 8d; and comments by Lieberman in Rosenthal, Yerushalmi Neziqin, 138. 165. Second Temple Jerusalem: Josephus, War 4, 582; M Sukkah 5, 5; Tanuma, Matot, 2 (p. 79b); Y Shabbat 17, 1, 16a. On priests sounding the shofar or trumpet on various occasions, see SifreNumbers 75 (p. 70) for Rosh Hashanah and Jubilees; T Sotah 7, 1516 (p. 196) (= Y Yoma 1, 1, 38d) for Haqhel; M Taanit 2, 5 for public fasts; Pirqei de R. Eliezer 38 for excommunication (see also Bchler, Types of
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three blasts with his trumpet to signal the cessation of work and another three at the conclusion of preparations for the Sabbath. This practice (at least with regard to the advent of the Sabbath) continued in Palestine until the end of antiquity. Several other tasks are also associated with the azzan. One mishnaic source indicates that the azzan also served as a teacher for children.166 This would not be surprising; just as the Simonias and Bostra communities mentioned above searched for a functionary who could fulll a number of dierent tasks, it may well be that this was or became a regular component of the azzans job description. The azzan also may have been charged with the not-always-pleasant task of collecting outstanding pledges. The diculty of this job, as well as its upside, is reected in the rabbinic reference to the azzan as an angel. 167 In court proceedings conducted in the synagogue, the azzan appears to have regularly lled two specic rolessummoning litigants to the legal proceedings, and the implementation of the courts decision, with specic reference to ogging.168 There is no reason to assume that the azzan mentioned in these court contexts was someone other than the ocial who fullled religious and liturgical roles within the synagogue. No distinction between two ocials called by the same name but having dierent tasks is ever alluded to in our sources. The assumption that we are dealing with one and the same oce is reinforced by the fact that all the above activities were clearly performed within the same institution, i.e., the synagogue.169
Teacher
Schoolteachers 170 are noted in rabbinic literature as an essential component of the communal network.171 Generally speaking, they conducted their lessons in the synagogue.172 The term sofer may include any one (or more) of the following roles: an early
Jewish-Palestinian Piety, 227.); T Sukkah 4, 1112 (pp. 27475); and Lieberman, TK, IV, 89496, for Late Antiquity in a town setting. B Shabbat 35b makes a point of stressing that this was done from the roof of the azzans house. See also Tanuma, Matot, 2 (p. 79b), where the number of blasts is reduced to three; see Margalioth, Dierences in Customs, no. 54, and comments on p. 178; as well as the tradition in M ullin 1, 7; Y Shabbat 17, 1, 16a. 166. M Shabbat 1, 3. 167. Leviticus Rabbah 16, 5 (p. 357) and parallels. 168. Summoning litigants: T Sanhedrin 9, 1 (p. 428); Y Sanhedrin 12, 4, 23a. Implementation of court decisions: M Makkot 3, 12; T Makkot 5, 2 (p. 444); B Makkot 23a. 169. Of interest in this regard is a late source noting that it is the judge who is responsible for the behavior, attitude, and salary of the azzan (as well as the sofer and police); see Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 21:1 (p. 454). See also ibid., Deuteronomy 16:18 (p. 371). 170. On this position in general, see Ebner, Elementary Education, 5160; Aberbach, Jewish Education, 3392; Arzt, Teacher, 3547. Other terms for teacher include . , , See Aberbach, Jewish Education, 3641. 171. B Sanhedrin 17b. 172. See above, Chap. 10. Classes may at times also have taken place in the homes of these teachers. See, for example, PRK 27, 1 (p. 402); B Betzah 16a; Arzt, Teacher, 44 n. 80.
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Second Temple sage, scribe, teacher, community secretary (= grammateus), meturgeman, preacher. In one tradition, these teachers are ranked just higher than azzanim.173 A variation of this tradition places the teacher (= sofer) squarely between sages on the one hand and azzanim and other Jews on the other: R. Eliezer the Great said: From the day the Temple was destroyed, sages began to be like the soferim, the soferim like azzanim, and the azzanim like [ordinary] people. 174 These teachers were praised because of the important role they played in the education of the young. Towns were uprooted, according to the second-century tanna R. Simeon b. Yoai, when citizens failed to support such teachers properly. As will be recalled, another source relates an incident, which allegedly took place in the third century, wherein teachers are referred to as the true guardians of a city ( 571.) According to one amora, these teachers are called a beloved group of God that will one day stand at His side.176 Thus, in places where the teacher was a communal employeeand this seems to have been the case very often, at least in Palestine an attempt was made to enhance his status. Private tutors, on the other hand, were often placed in demeaning and compromising situations in their quest for students, a situation common to the Greco-Roman world generally. Their pay was invariably poor, and more often than not they were forced to seek supplementary sources of income.177 Hiring and retaining good teachers were high on the agendas of many communities. According to one account, competition between cities and villages might focus on the success of each in building synagogues, establishing schools, and hiring teachers.178 As noted above, the people of Simonias approached R. Judah I, and the Jewish community of Bostra solicited Resh Laqish, for help in lling this as well as other positions.179 The
173. See above, note 129. 174. M Sotah 9, 15. According to MS Lowe (p. 105), this statement is attributed to R. Joshua. The term sofer here refers to schoolteachers, as the context clearly demonstrates, and not to scribes as reected in the New Testament and early rabbinic traditions; see the comments in Albeck, Six Orders, loc. cit., 415 16. In one list from a Roman context, the teacher or schoolmaster is ranked after the shoemaker, barber, and fuller; see Carcopino, Daily Life, 298 n. 25. 175. Y agigah 1, 7, 76c. See also PRK 15, 5 (p. 253); Lamentations Rabbah, Proem 2 (p. 1b); Midrash on Psalms 127 (pp. 256b257a). 176. PRK 27, 2 (p. 406); Leviticus Rabbah 30, 2 (p. 693) and later parallels. It should be noted that rabbinic sources are far from uniform regarding teachers. While some sources are, for the most part, quite favorable (B Bava Batra 8b; B Avodah Zarah 3b; Yalqut Shimoni, Exodus, 286 [pp. 44142]), others were far more reserved, their remarks often bordering on disparagement (Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7c, and parallels; Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 14143; B Pesaim 49b; B Sanhedrin 17b and 104b). 177. Marrou, History of Education, 2035; Carcopino, Daily Life, 109. See also Freeman, Schools of Hellas, 8182. 178. Seder Eliyahu Rabbah 11 (pp. 5455). Compare this to the situation in northern Italy, where a prominent town such as Como had no schools, and parents interested in educating their children had to send them to Milan (Pliny, Letter IV, 13). Another expression of competition among Palestinian towns might revolve around the acquisition of the burial remains of a well-known sage. See, for example, PRK 11, 23 (p. 199); B Bava Metzia 84b. 179. See above, notes 126 and 127.
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obligation to pay taxes to cover tuition is reiterated time and again in Palestinian rabbinic sources. Certain taxes, obligatory after a twelve-month residency, included monies earmarked for teachers, and the rabbis oer the highest praise to a bachelor who pays these taxes, thus subtly hinting that no one ought be exempt.180 According to one tradition, the payment of taxes for such purposes is even more important than giving to charity.181 Clearly, the rabbis were supportive of teachers, although it is no less certain that there were many people who tried to avoid such payments. Little is noted in our sources about the requisite qualications for becoming a teacher. In fact, only one mishnah addresses the issue, albeit in a negative fashion, i.e., by spelling out those who should not hold such a position. The issue in this particular case appears to have been one of modesty; a teacher should not be placed in potentially compromising situations: A bachelor may not teach children [lit., shall not learn subjects and skills associated with teachers], nor may a woman teach children. R. Eliezer says: Even one who does not have [or: no longer has] a wife may not teach children. 182 Sages further recommend what conduct is to be considered appropriate or inappropriate for teachers; for example, one should not be irritable.183 Use of a strap for punishment is associated with some teachers, and the fear they engendered in their pupils met with criticism in some halakhic discussions.184 Corporal punishment was endemic to the Roman world generally, and Quintilian, as noted, minced no words in upbraiding such behavior with regard to children.185 An interesting discussion among Babylonian sages focuses on whether an unsuccessful teacher should be replaced by a better one. Rava claimed that the latter would eventually be no better than the former; R. Dimi asserted that the latter would always be motivated to succeed, for jealousy [i.e., competition] among teachers increases wisdom [681 .]
180. Y Peah 8, 7, 21a; see also B Bava Batra 8b; PRK 27, 1 (p. 402); Leviticus Rabbah 27, 2 (p. 624); PRK 9, 9 (p. 150); Tanuma, Emor, 10 (p. 45a). 181. PRK 27, 1 (p. 402) and parallels. On rabbinic attempts to justify such salaries, despite their claim that one should not derive material benets from teaching the Torah, see Y Nedarim 4, 3, 38c; B Nedarim 37a (see also B Bekhorot 29a); SifreDeuteronomy 48 (p. 111); Leviticus Rabbah 30, 1 (p. 688); Derech Eretz Zutta 4, 3 (p. 38). 182. M Qiddushin 4, 13. See the extension of the prohibition in T Qiddushin 5, 10 (p. 297) and parallels; Lieberman, TK, VIII, 980. Later halakhah does not accept this addition as normative (Maimonides, Laws of Talmud Torah 2, 4). 183. M Avot 2, 10. 184. On punishment: B Sukkah 29a; B Bava Batra 21a; see Sokolo, Dictionary, 421; B Gittin 36a; B Makkot 16b. On instilling fear in pupils: B Shabbat 13a. For instances of excessive physical punishment, see the incidents recorded in Y Moed Qatan 3, 1, 81d; Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a. 185. Institutio oratoria 1, 3, 1317. For the text, see above, Chap. 10. On the Institutio and the methods advocated therein, see Murphy, Quintilian, xviiixxxiv. 186. B Bava Batra 21a.
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Since instruction of the young invariably took place in the synagogue, teachers spent much time there. Accordingly, a teacher was once asked to greet certain visitors to the synagogue.187 In the Yerushalmi, teachers are noted as consulting with sages, presumably regarding issues connected with their instruction, but perhaps on other matters as well.188 Teachers appear to have taken on additional roles within the synagogue.189 On a number of occasions they functioned as translators of Scriptures (meturgemanim),190 and York has suggested that translation may have been a regularif not primaryassignment of theirs.191 They also appear to have served as Torah readers, and at times led in the recitation of the Shema.192 Only one inscription makes specic mention of a sofer, and the person holding that title appears to have been a recognized personality. In the inscription from the Susiya synagogue, it is noted that R. Asi, the holy teacher and honorable priest ( ,)made a substantial donation, possibly on the occasion of the marriage of his son, R. Yoanan, a sofer.193 It is quite possible that this R. Yoanan was a teacher, although, as indicated, the word sofer may refer to any one of several positions.
Minor Ocials
Each synagogue undoubtedly had someone, a kind of building superintendent, to take care of the physical facilities. This task may have been fullled by a shamash, a title mentioned only rarely in rabbinic sources. Such a position is reected in the anachronistic reference to the Patriarch Jacob fullling such a role in an academy.194 An inscription from the synagogue at Bet Shearim may refer to someone in charge of synagogue furnishings and, if so, would point to such a position.195 A teacher may also have served as such an attendant; in fact, one teacher by the name of Nikkai, from Migdal near Tiberias, is mentioned in the Yerushalmi as a shamash, while in later midrashim he is called a teacher (sofer).196 Another group associated with the synagogue is the batlanim. Determining the nature of this group has proven to be dicult, in part owing to the paucity of sources. The term
187. Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a. 188. Y Megillah 3, 6, 74b. 189. As did Roman teachers. See above, note 177. 190. Y Megillah 4, 1, 74d; 4, 5, 75b. 191. York, Targum in Synagogue and School, 8182. 192. Torah readers: Y Megillah 3, 8, 74b; Tractate Soferim 11, 3 (pp. 22627). Shema: Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 15:1 (p. 284). 193. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 75. 194. See Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Targum Neoti of Gen. 25:27. 195. Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 141; see also Schwabe and Lifshitz, Beth Shearim, II, 19293. 196. Y Maaser Sheni 5, 2, 56a. In other sources, Nikkai is referred to as a sofer; PRK 11, 16 (p. 193); Y Sheviit 9, 1, 38d; Lamentations Rabbah 3 (p. 63b); Ecclesiastes Rabbah 10, 8.
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batlan is usually understood as one unemployed, unoccupied. But it may refer to one who has no need to work,197 i.e., a member of the community who has the time to tend to synagogue matters, particularly to help make up the necessary quorum of ten for certain prayers and Torah reading. This is the activity that is often noted in rabbinic sources with respect to the batlanim. Naturally, not every village or town would have had the requisite number of persons, and the Mishnah thus denes a large village ( ) as one having ten such citizens.198 R. Joshua b. Levi, in the third century, suggests that it was because of these ten men that at least ten verses were required for the public reading of the Torah.199
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educational and liturgical dimensions of the synagogue, including those who conducted the worship services, distributed charity, taught the children, and served as synagogue attendants. Such functionaries do not usually merit inscriptions or communal honors.200 However, as neat as the above solution might seem, it is not altogether satisfactory. In the rst place, neither type of source adheres strictly to the above division. Moreover, the issue becomes more complex when we consider that the discrepancy is not merely between rabbinic and epigraphical sources, but also within the epigraphical evidence itself. When we examine the 130-or-so Hebrew and Aramaic synagogue inscriptions found in Roman-Byzantine Palestine, we nd no trace of the terms regularly found in Diaspora inscriptions. There is no mention of an archisynagogue, presbyter (zaqen), archon, pater, or mater. Instead, the oces that do appear dovetail rather neatly with those mentioned in rabbinic sources; the titles that constitute the core of rabbinic discussions regarding the synagogue and related matters are the most prominent in Palestinian Semitic inscriptions. The azzan, for example, is noted in three inscriptions, from orvat Ammudim in the Galilee, Aphek in the Golan, and En Gedi in the south. A parnas and priest are mentioned at Naaran, and the latter designation appears twice in the Susiya synagogue.201 Even the title rabbi, whatever its precise meaning, occurs some fty times in these Palestinian inscriptions, as against only seven times in the Diaspora inscriptions.202 Moreover, in contrast to the Diaspora evidence, where the benefactors are invariably individuals and at times ocials, many Palestinian inscriptions speak of communal efforts. In no fewer than ten inscriptions from every part of the country, it is the community as a whole that contributed to the building. Such was the case at ammat Tiberias, Bet Shean, and Bet Alpha in the north; Jericho and Naaran in the Jordan Valley; Susiya (twice) and Maon in the south; and Ashkelon and Caesarea along the coast.203
200. This approachexplaining contradictions by assuming that dierent aspects or dimensions of a phenomenon are being addressedhas been applied in other areas as well. For example, the case of the Second Temple that Herod built has received a great deal of scholarly attention over the years. Even the most cursory examination of Mishnah Middot and Josephus descriptions of this building reveals some startling dierences that have long baed scholars. One of the more widespread approaches to this enigma in the past has been to claim precisely this dichotomy: Josephus focuses on the exterior aspects of the building while rabbinic literature deals primarily with its interior (see, for example, Avi-Yonah, Second Temple, 39697). Moreover, the approach has been used extensively when dealing with the issue of hellenization. Rather than simply denying the phenomenon, which has become increasingly dicult with the passage of time and the accumulation of data, a favorite approach of minimalists in this regard is to speak in terms of a shell and a kernel, i.e., Judaism may have been inuenced by Hellenism in some of its externalities, but its essential nature (whatever that may have been) has been preserved intact and relatively undiluted. See, for example, Feldman, How Much Hellenism? 83111; cf. L. Levine, Judaism and Hellenism, passim. 201. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 20, 28, 58, 63, 75. 202. These appear in ve dierent inscriptions; see S. J. D. Cohen, Epigraphical Rabbis, 117. 203. North: Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 26, 46, and 43, respectively. Jordan Valley: ibid., nos. 69
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This emphasis on communal eorts corresponds to the statement in one rabbinic source that addresses the issue of synagogue building directly: ( The villagers may compel one another to build a synagogue and buy a Torah scroll and [book of ] Prophets).204 According to one rabbinic tradition, synagogues belong to the community as a whole;205 the phenomenon of communal contributions is thus readily understandable and existed side by side with individual contributions.206 The opposite, however, is not the case. Communal contributions were almost unknown in Greek-speaking environs,207 and individual contributions are exclusively in evidence. A further distinction is required at this point and has to do with our use of the term Jewish Palestine. What has been noted above is, in fact, restricted to the Hebrew and Aramaic material. When, however, we examine the seventy or so Greek inscriptions known to date throughout Palestine,208 the oces familiar to us from Diaspora material are clearly in evidence. Six archisynagogues are mentioned in Greek inscriptions, once from Jerusalem (Theodotos) and once from Caesarea (Beryllos), twice from Bet Shearim ( Jacob of Caesarea, the archisynagogue of Pamphylia, and Avitus), and twice from Sepphoris ( Judah the archisynagogue of Sidon, and Sevrianos Aphros the archisynagogue of Tyre).209 Other titles appear as well: presbyters in Caesarea and Jerusalem, a phrontistes in Caesarea, a pronomenos or pronoetes and mizoteros (?) from Tiberias, and a comes from Sepphoris.210 Thus, there is a marked discrepancy not only between Palestinian and Diaspora inscriptions, but also among those in Palestine itself, and the distinction appears to be sharp and clear. On the one hand, Palestinian Greek inscriptions bear a strong resemblance to those of the Diaspora, while the Hebrew-Aramaic ones correlate rather well with rabbinic evidence. Greek titles appear in Greek inscriptions, and this heavily hellenized nomenclature was undoubtedly dominant owing to the extensive contact of these Jewish communities with the surrounding Greco-Roman world. Since each of the terms appearing in Greek synagogue inscriptions has parallels in titles relating to Greek and Roman institutions, it would seem that these Jewish communities adopted not only the terminology
and 64, respectively. South: ibid., nos. 83, 84, and 57, respectively. The coast: ibid., no. 53; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 25. 204. T Bava Metzia 11, 23 (p. 125); and Lieberman, TK, IX, 32021. 205. M Nedarim 5, 5. 206. See, for example, Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 7, 12, 18, 20, 29, 35, 50, 5963, 71, and 75. See also NEAEHL, II, 56569; as well as Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 33, and, generally, pp. 5464. 207. One exception comes from Caesarea, where an inscription speaks of a donation of the people ( ); see Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 25. 208. See above, Chap. 6, note 12; and several other inscriptions from elsewhere in Tiberias. 209. Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, nos. 19, 27, pp. 137, 143, and no. 24, respectively. 210. Presbyters: ibid., no. 19. Phrontistes: ibid., no. 27. Pronomenos or pronoetes, and mizoteros: ibid., nos. 18 and 17, respectively. Comes: ibid., no. 24.
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of the Hellenistic world, but something of its organizational and administrative patterns as well. On the other hand, rabbinic literature and the Hebrew-Aramaic inscriptions of Palestine focus largely on a particular geographical location: the interior hill country and the Jordan Valley, with special reference to rural areas that were generally less exposed to these inuences. This basically geographical distinction is rather compelling. The Greek inscriptions of Palestine, with their Greek nomenclature, were all found in Hellenistic settings, either Greco-Roman cities such as Caesarea or Ashkelon or Jewish cities (e.g., Tiberias) exhibiting a signicant degree of acculturation. Moreover, almost all of the archisynagogues mentioned in these Greek inscriptions had well-documented ties with Diaspora communities. Such, for example, was the case with the archisynagogues of Tyre and Sidon at Sepphoris, with Beryllos of Caesarea, with Jacob of Pamphylia, resident of Caesarea, and, of course, with Theodotos of Jerusalem whose family hailed from Rome. Aside from the internal-external dimensions or the geographical distinction already noted, it is also possible to view this dierence in synagogue nomenclature along urbanrural lines. The assumption, then, might be that much of rabbinic literature (especially the tannaitic material), together with the Semitic epigraphical evidence from Palestine (i.e., the Hebrew and Aramaic inscriptions), mainly derive from (or reect) the rural areas of the country, while the Diaspora material and Greek inscriptions from Palestine are more typically urban. Thus, the fact that in Jewish Palestine individuals rarely built synagogues (or large parts of them) and that communal eorts were much more predominant may argue for a rural rather than urban context. However, even this type of distinction is not foolproof. Some congregational inscriptions do, in fact, come from cities such as ammat Tiberias, Bet Shean, and Caesarea. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that villages often had modes of communal organization dierent from those in large cities, particularly when the cities were heavily inuenced by Hellenistic models. Although it might seem preferable to adopt only one of the three positions noted above, each, in fact, has some measure of cogency. Clearly, the epigraphical evidence and the talmudic material oer dierent perspectives, as do the Palestinian Greek inscriptions in contrast to the Hebrew-Aramaic ones. To assume that inscriptions focus on the external appearance of a building and the rabbinic sources on its internal aspects is not altogether unreasonable, nor without parallel. Nevertheless, as noted, such a distinction is not fully satisfactory; rabbinic literature, for its part, is not totally oblivious to the physical aspects of the synagogue building or to contributions made to it. The sages in rabbinic literature seem to deliberately downplay prominent synagogue ocials, such as the archisynagogue. This may stem not only from rabbinic disinterest in the position per se, but also from possible tensions between these two types of leadership.211 Relations between the
211. On the tensions between the sages and communal leadership generally, see Bchler, Political and Social Leaders; L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 98. and esp. 16776.
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rabbis and the wealthy were often problematic during this period; if a wealthy individual was charged with running an institution that some rabbis wished to inuence, the resulting relationship was often not entirely harmonious.212 Yet the geographical argument is no less compelling in light of the remarkable compatibility between rabbinic sources and Palestinian Aramaic-Hebrew inscriptions in what they both do and do not say. The weak link in this suggestion is that these two areas, the Diaspora and Palestine, were not totally unrelated. On the one hand, Jewish Palestine as reected in rabbinic literature knows of the archisynagogue or the rosh knesset; on the other, the title azzan appears in several Diaspora contexts.213 Therefore, a theory based solely on geographical considerations is insucient. Finally, there can be no question that much of rabbinic (especially tannaitic) material reects non-urban contexts, as do most of the extant non-Greek epigraphical remains. Before we can judge the cogency of the urban-rural dichotomy, however, we must consider some crucial missing components. For example, how were Jewish communities in the rural Diaspora organized? Did their synagogue dedicatory inscriptions and modes of operation parallel those of rural Palestine, their urban Diaspora coreligionists, or perhaps neither? It would appear unlikely that Diaspora rural practice was similar to that in Palestine (examples from Hellenistic and early Roman Egypt, which are overwhelmingly rural, would seem to bear this out), but we cannot be sure about this for Late Antiquity. Until we have more data in hand, the possibility of an urban-rural distinction must remain speculative. Indeed, only on rare occasion do we nd contrary evidence of such an urban-rural correlation, to wit, the inscription from urban Caesarea that speaks of a contribution of the people, using a phrase characteristic of Palestinian Semitic evidence.214 The existence of such evidence should caution against making any premature generalization. Thus, given the limited sources available, it is impossible to embrace any one of the above positions without reservation. Perhaps this is the true value of the diverse material at our disposal. Just as our sources are complex, so, too, seems to have been the reality of Late Antiquity. Any kind of oversimplication or attempt to t all the evidence into one particular mold may well do injustice to both the sources and the historical reality behind them. When all is said and done, however, one fact can be safely asserted. For whatever reason, be it cultural, geographical, or sociological, synagogue ocialdom in Jewish Palestine appears to have been dierent from that of the Diaspora, as well as from that of the hellenized areas of Palestine. This is true of the titles used and presumably of the roles played as well. Some common threads indeed existed, but clearly there were regional dif212. L. Levine, Sages and the Synagogue, 20122; and below, Chap. 13. 213. Apamea: Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 40. Alexandria: T Sukkah 4, 6 (p. 273). 214. Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, no. 25.
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ferences, which, in turn, reected a wide range of political, social, and cultural realities about which we are only very partially informed. The situation in Jewish Palestine was indeed unique, probably because remnants of earlier Jewish practices were preserved there to a greater degree than in the Diaspora, where the pressures and attractions of acculturation were more intense.
CONCLUSIONS
Several aspects of synagogue leadership in antiquity have become clear from the above discussion. Most obvious, of course, is the wide variety of titles for these ocials of the Jewish communities throughout the Empire.215 Titles appearing with frequency in one region may have been entirely absent from another. Moreover, the combinations of titles assumed by ocials in a given locale might have diered considerably from those appearing elsewhere. It is clear that there was no xed nomenclature for synagogue leadership throughout the Jewish world of Late Antiquity. Thus, we may safely conclude, here as elsewhere, that local communities enjoyed a wide range of autonomy. This was expressed not only by how and where they built their synagogues and the types of activities conducted therein, but also by the form and nature of their leadership. This local contextual focus also serves to highlight the absence in Jewish life of Late Antiquity of any kind of overriding sacerdotal or communal authority in either Palestine or the Diaspora, with the exception of Babylonia. This pattern of locally based authority is somewhat similar to that found in pagan life and stands in contrast to that characteristic of Christianity, where the concentration of power in a dominant ecclesiastical framework tended to homogenize patterns of leadership. 216 Clearly, the synagogue evolved along very dierent lines. This having been said, certain qualications ought to be made. While diversity is the dominant feature of synagogue leadership in antiquity, the situation was far from chaotic. Titles may have diered, but the menu of choices was fairly limited. The same titles often appeared in far-ung Jewish communities. The most prominent of these was archisynagogue. While not used everywhere in the Jewish world, it was by far the most ubiquitous title, appearing in Jewish communities the length and breadth of the Empire. A further conclusion to be drawn from our discussion is the extent to which the Jewish community borrowed from its Greco-Roman surroundings in choosing these titles. Some titles may have been mere translations of well-known ones used in earlier Jewish society, as, for example, presbyter for zaqen, or grammateus for sofer; others may have been generic enough to t already existing leadership roles as well, as was probably the case with the title archon. Nevertheless, even in these instances the very choice of these titles in
215. On the heterogeneity of Roman synagogues, see Williams, Structure of Roman Jewry, 12941. 216. See Bradshaw, Liturgical Presidency, 2127.
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their Greek form was clearly determined by the larger context of the Greco-Roman world in which the Jews lived. However, with regard to other terms, chief among which was archisynagogue, such equivocation is uncalled for. These terms were patently borrowed from the surrounding culture and were appropriated and adapted by the Jews for their own needs. The case of the archisynagogue is the most striking example of the remodeling of a foreign form into a Jewish context, wherein the oce itself seems to have been signicantly altered in both denition and status. The phrontistes, pater and mater synagoges, and even the azzan, whose roots appear to have been in Assyrian and Babylonian cultures, are additional instances of such adopted titles. Finally, synagogue ocials were products of their age in one further respect. Synagogues depended on the benefactions of their members, be they wealthy individuals or the community at large. There simply was no other source of revenue, neither a Jewish institutional framework nor Imperial government funds. Thus, the entire nancial burden fell on the local community. What we have seen above, both in this chapter and in earlier ones, is the degree to which the Jews adopted the practice of philotimia, or euergetism, from the Greco-Roman world. Private benefactions for cities, institutions, services, and countless amenities are a most salient characteristic of city life in Greco-Roman society. Temples, festivals, and other celebrations might merit support; in case of crises such as famines and plagues, wealthy individuals would help alleviate suering.217 Many contributions were made to the Temple in Jerusalem by auent Diaspora Jews, even though the institution itself was well endowed by ocial sources (Hasmonean and, later, Herodian) and by the massive contributions of the half-sheqel by Jews everywhere.218 The synagogues, however, enjoyed no such institutionalized international support, and thus contributions of local individuals were indispensable. From what we have seen above, such contributions were forthcoming from synagogue ocials and laypeople alike. While the above discussion has been able to address a number of issues, some matters must remain unanswered owing to a lack of sucient information. How are we to account for a given communitys selection of some titles, and not others? The simplest answer would be that these were the titles most prominent in the wider society of that given area. Chances are that this explanation goes a long way in accounting for these dierences but, given the lack of supporting evidence from most surrounding contexts, there is no way of demonstrating this satisfactorily. No less than for titles, functions, and organization, information about the synagogue ocials themselves, on a personal level, is wanting. Who were these people? Which strata of the populationsocial, economic, religiousdid they represent? What were their aspirations and motivations? What obstacles did they encounter? These questions go well
217. White, Building Gods House, 7785; Rogers, Gift and Society, 18899. 218. See, for example, Josephus, War 5, 2016.
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beyond the scope of our sources. It is thus quite unusual, and indeed fortuitous, that an amulet containing a prayer of one Yosi, son of Zenobia, was found in the Merot synagogue in the Upper Galilee. He was clearly the leader of his community, and while he never called himself an archisynagogue or a rosh knesset, it appears quite certain that this, in fact, was his role. The text of this amulet gives expression to several aspects of synagogue leadership (or communal leadership generally, for that matter), i.e., the clash between leader and congregation, the formers resolve to prevail, and the accompanying feelings of frustration and isolation. We conclude this chapter with his personal prayer, which reads as follows:
For Your lovingkindness and for Your truth [Ps. 115:1, 138:2]. In the name of God, we shall do and we shall succeed! Strong and mighty God! Blessed be Your name and blessed be Your kingdom! As You have conquered the sea with Your horses and You have crushed the earth with Your shoes, and as You suppress the trees in the winter days and the grass in the earth in the summer days, so may the people of this village be subdued before Yosi son of Zenobia. May my words and my authority be upon them. Just as the heavens are subdued before God, and the earth is subdued before men, and men are subdued before death, and death is subdued before God, so may the people of this village be subdued, broken, and fall before Yosi son of Zenobia. In the name of the angel Hatuaa, who was sent before Israel, I make this signSuccess, Success, Amen, Amen, Selah, Hallelujah.219
219. For a full discussion, see Naveh, Good Subduing, 36782. On the excavations at Merot, see Z. Ilan, Synagogue and Bet Midrash of Meroth, 2141.
twelve
he status and authority of the Patriarch in Late Antiquity is a subject that has merited a great deal of scholarly attention over the past generation.1 Assessments have ranged from those regarding the oce as pivotal, aecting Jewish communities throughout the entire Roman Empire, to those assuming that the Patriarchate declined precipitously in the course of the third and fourth centuries, with a minimal and often deleterious inuence on Jewish society.2 Such dramatically varied assessments stem directly from the fact that the sources at our disposal are limited yet varied.3 From rabbinic literature to the writings of the church fathers, from archaeological remains to Roman legal codes, the depiction of the Patriarchate is riddled with diverse and often contradictory information. Depending on which of these sources
1. Mantel, Studies, 153, 175253; L. Levine, Jewish Patriarch, 64988; idem, Status of the Patriarch, 132; J. Cohen, Roman Imperial Policy, 129; S. J. D. Cohen, Pagan and Christian Evidence, 17075; Goodman, State and Society, 11118; idem, Roman State and the Jewish Patriarch, 12739; idem, Roman Identity, 94*99*; Stemberger, Jews and Christians in the Holy Land, 23068; Jacobs, Die Institution; Rosenfeld, Crisis of the Patriarchate, 23957; S. A. Cohen, Three Crowns, 200204; Hezser, Social Structure, 40617; S. Schwartz, Patriarchs and the Diaspora, 20822. 2. See the assessments of Mantel, L. Levine, J. Cohen, S. J. D. Cohen, Goodman, Stemberger, S. Schwartz, and Jacobs as against those of Rosenfeld and S. A. Cohen (above, note 1). 3. For a review and discussion of these sources, see L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 426; Jacobs, Die Institution, passim.
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one chooses to emphasize and how others are incorporated into the wider picture, very dierent conclusions can be drawn regarding this oce and its authority within Jewish society. Given the centrality of the synagogue in Jewish communities throughout the Empire, it would seem that the degree of the Patriarchs prominence in Jewish communal aairs had a direct bearing on his involvement in and inuence on this institution. The sources relating specically to the relationship between the Patriarchate and the synagogue are intriguing. Although they are preciously few in number, they point to the seemingly signicant role of this oce in synagogues, at least at certain times and places. Let us begin by reviewing the material at our disposal and then attempt to place the sources in some sort of historical perspective.
RABBINIC LITERATURE
The rabbinic sources that make some sort of connection between the Patriarch (Nasi) and the synagogue can be divided into four categories: those in which the association is tangential and thus of limited value for our discussion; those that tell of Patriarchal involvement in appointing synagogue personnel; those relating to Patriarchal responsibilities and authority over activities that certainlyand in some cases almost certainly took place in the synagogue; and, nally, one specic source that makes an explicit connection between the Patriarch and a range of communal institutions, particularly the synagogue. This last-mentioned source, which happens to be the earliest, seems to have been the product of R. Aqivas students in the mid-second century c.e. (i.e., the Ushan era).4 In a discussion of vows between two people wishing to deprive each other of certain benets, it is stated that one can ban the other from deriving satisfaction not only from personal eects, but also from local institutions, such as the bathhouse, town plaza, and synagogue (together with its ark and books), since all residents are considered co-owners of these institutions.5 Since such a situation could easily have led to total anarchy or to a general disregard of these regulations, the Mishnah indicates a way to circumvent this type of ban:
Yet one may assign his part [of the institutions] to the Nasi [and then the other person could benet from these institutions since the one making the ban is no longer a co-owner]. R. Judah says: It makes no dierence whether he assigns them to the Nasi or to any other private individual. What, then, is the dierence between one who assigns [them] to the Nasi or one who assigns [them] to a private individual? 6 One who assigns [them] to the Patriarch would not have to formally grant him [the Nasi] title [to the building]. But the sages say: In either
4. J. N. Epstein, Introduction to Tannaitic Literature, 37882. 5. M Nedarim 5, 5; B Betzah 39b. 6. On the literary form, What, then is the dierence . . . ? see B Shevuot 13b (also quoting R. Judah); M Arakhin 3, 2; 7, 2.
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case, formal title must be granted. And they spoke of the Nasi only with regard to existing items. R. Judah says: Galileans do not have to assign [their shares to the Nasi], since their ancestors have already done so. 7
While the possibility of assigning communal property to the Patriarch is certainly of importance, R. Judah (ben Ilai)s statement, that such arrangements had already been made by Galileans in the past, is intriguing. The Bavli cites the following tannaitic tradition in the name of R. Judah: The Galileans were cantankerous and would vow not to benet one another. Their ancestors [lit., fathers] then assigned their shares [i.e., title to their property] to the Nasi. 8 Taken at face value, this source has far-reaching implications, namely, that the second-century Galilean synagogue already belonged, in some fashion, to the Patriarch; such an arrangement was in eect already in R. Judahs day, i.e., in the time of the Patriarch Rabban Simeon ben Gamaliel, following the Bar-Kokhba rebellion, and may even date back to the rst century c.e. 9 However, there is also the possibility that the mishnaic tradition itself is theoretical and that the Bavlis explanation, in the name of R. Judah, is an attempt to explain it, but should not be taken too seriously from a historical perspective. Too often the Bavli has been suspect of projecting its own agenda on Palestinian traditions, even in the name of Palestinian sages.10 However, even assuming some historicity, the implications of such assignments regarding the Nasi remain unclear. Did everyone do so, or was it the practice only in some places and by a small minority of the population? If the latter, then perhaps it was only within rabbinic circles of second-century Galilee that the Patriarch was a recognized leader who was assigned ownership of public property. However, this does not, at rst glance, appear to be the intent of the source; what seems to be described here is a more general situation throughout the Galilee. Moreover, the question arises as to what precisely such an assignment meant. Was it to avoid the deleterious consequences of rash vows, thus making it merely a theoretical gesture, or was there some practical conse7. M Nedarim 5, 5. Although many medieval, and even some modern, commentators have suggested that the term Nasi refers to a local leader (see Albeck, Six Orders, III, 363; J. N. Epstein, Introduction to the Mishnaic Text, I, 361 n. 2), I am assuming that the Patriarch in Palestine is intended. No local ocial bearing such a title is known from any other rabbinic source. See also Mantel (Studies, 4549), who dates this tradition to the pre-70 era. For a messianic interpretation of this tradition (based on Ezekiel and Y Nedarim 5, 6, 39b), see Jacobs, Die Institution, 4849. 8. B Nedarim 48a. 9. It has been noted on various occasions of late that there is no reliable historical tradition attesting to the fact that the title Nasi was used with regard to the Patriarchal house before the mid second century (see S. Safrai, Mantel, Studies, 7071; idem, Jewish Self-Government, 389; idem, In Times of Temple and Mishnah, II, 365 n. 1) or even the third, according to Goodblatt (Monarchic Principle, 18493, esp. 192); see also idem, The Title Nasi, 11417). Our source seems to indicate a mid second century use of the title and perhaps hints at its usage even earlier. Goodblatt, regrettably, does not discuss this mishnah. 10. For example, the account concerning R. Kahana in B Bava Qama 117a (Gafni, Babylonian Yeshiva, 292301; Sperber, On the Unfortunate Adventures, 83100) as well as the tannaitic tradition excoriating the am ha-aretz in B Pesaim 49b (Wald, BT Pesahim III, 21139).
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quence in having the Patriarch own these properties? Was the oce also involved, or made to be involved, in the operation of these institutions? Were synagogue ocials or the townspeople at large accountable to the Patriarch in some fashion? Unfortunately, the lack of additional information prevents us from formulating any rm answers to these questions.11 Thus, despite the potentially far-reaching implications of this source for the subject at hand, its historical value is severely limited by its vagueness as well as by the absence of corroborating evidence. A further complication lies in the fact that the picture emerging from this source seems to go against what we know from other sources about this period generally and about the status of the Patriarch in particular. The communis opinio is that the postBar Kokhba era witnessed a serious diminution in the political and economic standing of Palestinian Jews and the Patriarch. It was at this time, for example, that Rabban Simeon b. Gamaliel was challenged from within the academy as well as by ananiah, who attempted to wrest control of calendrical authority from the Patriarch on behalf of Babylonia.12 Moreover, we know of no contact between the Patriarch and the Roman government, giving the impression that the oces prominence had suered at this time. Therefore, even if we are to assume the basic historicity of the above account, the challenge of tting it into the overall picture of this time frame in the history of the Galilee and the Patriarchate remains formidable. This may be why many historians such as Alon, Oppenheimer, and Goodman have simply ignored this mishnah when discussing the Ushan period.13 A second type of rabbinic source attests to Patriarchal involvement in, and even control of, certain activities that regularly took place within the synagogue. In the late third century, R. Judah II Nesiah dispatched three sages to establish (or to assign, ) schoolteachers in towns throughout Palestine;14 they presumably taught in the synagogue.15 Patriarchal control of the judicial system is also well attested throughout rabbinic literature, and in most locales these courts probably convened in the synagogue.16 A third category deals with the appointment of synagogue functionaries. We have
11. According to Z. Safrai, the above source indicates that the Nasi was the initiator and owner of Galilean synagogues from the Ushan period onward; see his Jewish Community, 186. 12. Internal challenge: Y Bikkurim 3, 3, 65c; B Horayot 13b14a. Babylonia: Y Nedarim 6, 13, 40a; B Berakhot 63ab. 13. Alon, Jews in Their Land, passim; Oppenheimer, Galilee, 4559; Goodman, State and Society, 111 14. 14. Y agigah 1, 7, 76c; Sokolo, Dictionary, 590. See also Lamentations Rabbah, Proem 2 (p. 1b); PRK 15, 5 (p. 253); Midrash on Psalms 127, 1 (pp. 256b257a); Yalqut Shimoni, Psalms, 881. It is possible that two other sages, R. anina (according to MS Rome) and R. Jonathan, were sent by R. Judah Nesiah II to the south to make peace (Y Berakhot 9, 1, 12d). Both of these sages were in the company of the elders of the South when at ammat Gader (Y Eruvin 6, 3, 23c), and R. Jonathan is mentioned as having spent time there with the Patriarch (Y Qiddushin 3, 14, 64c). 15. See above, Chap. 10. 16. See Mantel, Studies, 20621; L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 710.
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already had occasion to refer to the account in which the community of Simonias asked R. Judah I for help in nding someone who would ll a wide range of communal functions. The phrase used in this regard may be signicantGive us [ ] someone. 17 Another account, two generations later, tells of the Bostra community consulting with Resh Laqish on the same matter: Show us [ ] someone . . . 18 Might we conclude that whereas the Nasi was asked to make appointments, Resh Laqish was asked merely to make recommendations? This is certainly a possibility, although the meager evidence at hand precludes conclusiveness.19 Finally, there are a number of sources that make a connection between the Patriarch and the synagogue but do not indicate the ocial standing of the former with regard to the latter. So, for example, Rabban Gamaliel II once visited a synagogue in Tiberias and issued a decision contrary to local practice; in Achziv he was asked by the head of the local synagogue about a halakhic matter.20 Rabban Gamaliels son, R. anina, once told the meturgeman in the Kabul synagogue to translate only the last part of Gen. 35:22 of the Torah reading (thereby omitting the account of Reuben and Bilhah).21 In reverence for a deceased Patriarch, there were special mourning practices conducted in the synagogue: Our rabbis have taught: If a sage dies, his academy suspends [its usual routine]. If the head of a court [av bet din] dies, all academies in his city are suspended, and they gather in the synagogue and change their seating: those who sit in the north sit in the south, those who sit in the south sit in the north. [When] a Nasi dies, academies everywhere are suspended, and the members of the congregation enter the synagogue and read seven portions from the Torah and depart. 22 Such unique behavior upon the death of a Nasi may have been no more than a public display of mourning within this central Jewish institution for an acknowledged communal gure. However, it may indeed reect a special standing that the Nasi held within the synagogue as well. Whatever the case, it may
17. Y Yevamot 12, 6, 13a; Genesis Rabbah 81, 1 (pp. 96972); Tanuma, Tzav, 7 (p. 9a). 18. Y Sheviit 6, 1, 36d; Tanuma, Massaei, 1; Deuteronomy Rabbah, Vetanan (ed. Lieberman, p. 60). 19. Indirect evidence of the Patriarchs authority in communal matters may be culled from the fact that a number of sages closely associated with the Nasi appear to have had signicant authority. R. Yoanan, at one point described as from the house of the Nasi (B Sotah 21a), is said to have made judicial appointments (B Sanhedrin 14a, 30b; Y Bikkurim 3, 3, 65d; L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 15159), and R. iyya bar Abba, also in the service of the Nasi (Y Hagigah 1, 7, 76c, and parallels), is credited with appointing archons (Y Peah 8, 7, 21a). Moreover, R. iyya may have even served as a Patriarchal apostolos (Y agigah 1, 8, 76d). On Rabban Gamaliels appointment of several sages to some sort of communal position, see SifreDeuteronomy 16 (p. 26); B Horayot 10a. 20. M Eruvin 10, 10; T Terumot 2, 13 (p. 115). 21. T Megillah 3, 35 (p. 363); B Megillah 25b. Interestingly, the Tosefta seems to indicate that R. anina himself was reading the Torah, whereas the Bavli explicitly notes that the synagogues azzan was reading. The reference to azzan, however, is unattested in Bavli MSS and by the Rishonim. 22. B Moed Qatan 22b23a.
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not be entirely coincidental that several instances of public condemnation of the Patriarch took place specically within the synagogue framework.23
ARCHAEOLOGICAL EV IDENCE
Two excavated synagogues are specically associated with the Patriarch, one from third-century Stobi, in the province of Macedonia, the other from fourth-century Tiberias, where the Patriarch resided. The association of the Patriarch with Stobi appears in a monumental inscription prominently displayed on a synagogue column that records an agreement between one Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos and the Stobi Jewish community.24 The precise formulation of the agreementbackground information about the donor, a description of the premises, a clarication of the legal basis of Polycharmos ownership, as well as the stipulation of a heavy ne to be imposed for breach of agreement (Whosoever wishes to make changes beyond these decisions of mine will give the Patriarch 250,000 denarii. For thus have I agreed)all attest to the importance of this inscription. That the Patriarch would be designated the sole beneciary of any violation of this contract appears to be conclusive evidence of the high prestige accorded his oce.25 Of the eleven inscriptions discovered in the ammat Tiberias synagogue, ten are dedicatory inscriptions in Greek.26 Of these, the two most prominent ones name Severus disciple [lit., one raised in the household] of the most Illustrious Patriarchs [ ].27
23. Genesis Rabbah 80, 1 (pp. 95053); Y Sanhedrin 2, 6, 20d; Y Bikkurim 3, 3, 65d. 24. See above, Chap. 8; and L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 13. 25. It has been suggested that the patriarch mentioned in the inscription is a local ocial noted on occasion in the Theodosian Code (e.g., 16, 8, 13). However, owing to the enormous sum involved, it is far more reasonable to assume that we are dealing here with the Patriarch of Palestine and not a local ocial. In any case, even if we were to assume that this was a local ocial, he may well have been in the service of the Palestinian Patriarch. See Hengel, Die Synagogeninschrift von Stobi, 15258. Reynolds and Tannenbaum have suggested that the Aphrodisias inscription reects Palestinian rabbinic inuence, which could have been eected only by the Patriarch ( Jews and God-Fearers, 8083), a claim rightly rejected by Williams (Jews and Godfearers, 297310). 26. Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, 5362; L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 14. These numbers do not include the brief identications of the zodiac signs and seasons of the year appearing in Hebrew. 27. See Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, 64. The word may also be translated as apprentice or pupil; Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, 57; Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 68; Stemberger, Jews and Christians, 231. Other meanings for the word include servant, servant born to a masters household, foundling; see Frey, CIJ, I, 57; Cameron, , 2762; Nani, , 4584; D. Martin, Construction of the Ancient Family, 46 n. 25. See also Di Segni, Inscriptions of Tiberias, 9294.
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[ ] Severus, disciple of the most Illustrious Patriarchs, fullled [it]. Blessings upon him. Amen. [ ] Severus, disciple of the most Illustrious Patriarchs completed [it]. Blessings on him and on Ioullos, the parnas [pronoetes].
Severus apparently was not only a wealthy individual, but was also proud to be associated with the Patriarch, a relationship that he took pains to note on both occasions. Undoubtedly, such a liaison aorded him an honorable position in the community. It is not surprising that the Nasi should appear in a fourth-century Tiberian synagogue, since in the previous century the oce had moved from Sepphoris to Tiberias, where it would remain until its disappearance in the early fth century.28
EPIPHANIUS
Of all the church fathers who have had occasion to mention the Patriarch in one context or another, only Epiphanius did so extensively. In his narrative about Joseph the Comes, a once-loyal member of the Patriarchs entourage who converted to Christianity and subsequently devoted himself to building churches in the Galilee, Epiphanius describes the Nasis involvement in Diaspora synagogues.29 Epiphanius description of the Patriarch, however, is an extremely problematic account historically speaking. Epiphanius Panarion was written around the year 375, and this particular story was told to him by Joseph himself several decades earlier (when the latter was already about seventy years old), some twenty-ve to thirty years after the events described purportedly transpired. Moreover, this narrative is rife with historical inaccuracies, gross exaggerations, a blatantly hostile attitude, and a harsh polemical tone.30 Nevertheless, whatever the value of this source (or lack thereof ) in general, the section of primary interest to us may be the most reliable part of Epiphanius account; it appears to be the least tendentious, as it describes Josephs duties when he was sent by the Patriarch to the Diaspora:
It happened that after the Patriarch Judah [that may have been his name], of whom we spoke, reached maturity, he gave Joseph in recompense the revenue of the apostleship. He was sent with letters to Cilicia, went up there, and started collecting the tithes and rstfruits from the Jews of the province in each of the cities of Cilicia. . . . Now because as an apostle [for that, as I said, is what they call the oce] he [was] quite austere and upright in his manner, [and because heL.L.] persisted in proposing measures to restore correct observance of the law,
28. Y. Cohen, When Did the Nesiut Move to Tiberias? 11422. It has also been suggested that there is archaeological evidence for the Nasi from ammat Gader. Habas (Rubin) claims that the reference to the [spring] of the Patriarch in a local inscription refers to the Jewish Patriarch (Poem by the Empress Eudocia, 10819). 29. See L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 2426; Rubin, Joseph the Comes, 10516; S. Schwartz, Patriarchs and the Diaspora, 20822. 30. Rubin, Joseph the Comes, 10516; Reiner, Joseph the Comes, 35586.
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deposing and removing from oce any of those appointed synagogue rulers, priests, elders, and azzanim [which in their language means ministers or servants], he angered many people who, as if in an attempt to avenge themselves, made every eort to pry into his aairs and investigate all that he did.31
On the basis of this account, it would seem that the Patriarch wielded a good deal of authority among the Diaspora communities of Asia Minor. Armed with letters of introduction from the Nasi, Joseph was sent to Cilicia on his behalf to collect taxes, referred to here in Temple terminology as tithes and rstfruits. As an apostle, Joseph also took the initiative in trying to rectify religious practice, which he presumably found lax. However, his authority seems to have been limited in this regard, if we can believe Epiphanius formulation. Joseph was only able to persist in proposing measures to restore correct observance of the law. Nevertheless, when it came to removing (and appointing?) synagogue ocials, Josephs authority appears to have been recognized and eective. Although he enraged many, it seems there was little that the communities could do, other than harass him, because of his status as representative of the Patriarch. This account clearly indicates that the power of the Patriarch was considerable and that, in some cases at least, local ocials were replaced by his emissaries at will. In any case, the basic historicity of Patriarchal authority over local synagogues (and communities) in the fourth century is conrmed by our next source.
31. Panarion, 30, 11, 14 (Rubin, Joseph the Comes, 100); cf. Jacobs, Die Institution, 30812. 32. On the complexity of the Theodosian Code text and its sources, as well as issues to be aware of in its usage, see J. F. Matthews, Laying Down the Law. With regard to the Jews and the Patriarch specically, see Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 5490.
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are subject to the rule of the Illustrious Patriarchs, that is the Archsynagogues [sicL.L.], the patriarchs, the presbyters and the others who are occupied in the rite of that religion, shall persevere in keeping the same privileges that are reverently bestowed on the rst clerics of the venerable Christian Law. For this was decreed in divine order also by the divine Emperors Constantine and Constantius, Valentinian and Valens. Let them therefore be exempt even from the curial liturgies, and obey their laws [emphasis mineL.L.].33
The above three decrees are clear-cut evidence of the dominance of the Patriarch in the fourth century and in a wide range of synagogue aairs. According to the rst, he stands at the head of a network of ocials, including archisynagogues, patriarchs, presbyters, and others, in charge of the religious dimension of the synagogue, and on a par with the Christian clergy. This arrangement purportedly dates to the time of Constantine. The second decree describes the Patriarch utilizing some of these same ocials to collect taxes from synagogues throughout the Empire. The last decree, while abolishing an earlier privilege, nevertheless attests that, at least until 415, the Patriarch had a recognized role in the founding and building of synagogues. When this role began we do not know. A fourth decree from the Theodosian Code, dating to the rst part of the fourth century, speaks of the religious involvement of patriarchs and presbyters in synagogue aairs. (4) A decree of Constantine from 330
Those who dedicated themselves with complete devotion to the synagogues of the Jews, to the patriarchs or to the presbyters, and while living in the above-mentioned sect, it is they
33. Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, no. 27; see also Jacobs, Die Institution, 28084; L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 1718. 34. Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, no. 30. Cf. Jacobs, Die Institution, 299300. 35. Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, no. 41. Cf. Jacobs, Die Institution, 28791.
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who preside over the law, shall continue to be exempt from all liturgies, personal as well as civil; in such a way that those that happen to be decurions already shall not be designated to transportations of any kind, for it would be appropriate that people such as these shall not be compelled for whatever reason to depart from the places in which they are. Those, however, who are denitely not decurions, shall enjoy perpetual exemption from the decurionate.36
The above reference to patriarchs is unclear, as is the syntax of the opening sentence. Does the phrase devotion to the synagogues refer to the Patriarch and presbyters, or did the emperor have two objects of devotion in mind: those devoted to the synagogue and those devoted to the patriarchs and presbyters? The former seems more likely. It thus appears that the decree relates specically to these two ocials who have dedicated themselves with complete devotion to the synagogue. The exemptions in the decree parallel those granted to the pagan priesthood and Christian clergy because of involvement in their respective religious institutions. It is unclear whether the reference to patriarchs points to local ocials or to the Patriarchs of Palestine. Certainty in this matter is elusive, and very diverse interpretations have been oered.37 Nevertheless, the context of this law seems to point to local ocials who may have been called patriarchs because they functionedat least in partunder the auspices of the Palestinian Patriarch. Thus, it would appear that both titles used in this law, patriarchs and presbyters, refer to local communal ocials who were granted exemptions from civil and Imperial liturgies. A suggestion to identify the presbyters (elders) with members of the Sanhedrin has no basis.38 There is no evidence for such an assumption; in fact, it is quite certain that no Sanhedrin existed in the third and fourth centuries.39
36. Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, no. 9. Cf. Jacobs, Die Institution, 27780. 37. Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 13334; S. J. D. Cohen, Pagan and Christian Evidence, 17172; Jacobs, Die Institution, 27577. On the vagueness of synagogue titles appearing in the Theodosian Code generally, see Rajak and Noy, Archisynagogoi, 80. 38. Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 133. 39. L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 7683; Goodblatt, Monarchic Principle, 23276; Jacobs, Die Institution, 9399.
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to Constantine in the early fourth century), it is dicult to assess how reective they are of an earlier period, or of the Empire as a whole. A number of scholars have posited a dramatic rise in Patriarchal prominence and authority under Theodosius I (37995 c.e.) and his successors, and such an assumption would restrict the Nasis authority as reected in these decrees to only a few brief decades.40 In contrast, we have argued elsewhere that many of the Patriarchal prerogatives enumerated in the Theodosian Code are, in fact, attested in other sources for earlier periods as well. When all these various sources are taken into consideration, it becomes clear that the Patriarchate enjoyed a great deal of prominence throughout most of the third and fourth centuries. In other words, when viewing the status of this oce in a broader perspective, we see that late fourth-century Patriarchal privileges appear to have been as much a continuation of past privileges as they were an innovation of the latter era. This observation holds true with respect to administrative, scal, and judicial matters in particular.41 As regards the Patriarchs involvement in the synagogue specically, supportive material is woefully limited. Other than Epiphanius account, the edicts from the Theodosian Code, and several possible allusions in rabbinic sources, no other third- or fourthcentury literary source speaks of actual Patriarchal control of or active intervention in local synagogues. Even the Stobi inscription tells us nothing about the nature of the Patriarchs involvement in synagogue life on an ongoing basis, nor does the mishnaic report of Galileans assigning public property to the Nasi. As for the right to build synagogues, clearly implied in the edict of 415, this may be interpreted as some sort of formal grant issued by the Patriarch to local communities, but without any real scal or administrative responsibility or authority. This was the situation throughout the Byzantine period when the formality of a provincial governors conrmation was required for local initiatives.42 We are thus at a standstill in this matter. This is unfortunate not merely because the issue itself is of great importance to our understanding of Jewish communal life in Late Antiquity, but also because positing the active involvement of the Patriarch in the ancient synagogue would help explain a number of related enigmas. It would go a long way toward accounting for the emergence of synagogues in general and the Galilean-type synagogue in particular in the course of the third century, at a time when the Patriarchal oce was accruing a large measure of power and prestige.43 It might also help explain the con40. See, for example, S. J. D. Cohen and Goodman (above, note 1). Cf. also Brown, Authority and the Sacred, 4748. J. Baumgarten (Art in the Synagogue, 2046) tends to maximize the inuence of the Patriarch and his circles on the synagogue. 41. L. Levine, Status of the Patriarch, 132. 42. See Campagnano-Di Segni, Involvement, 32832. Imperial building initiatives in the Roman Empire are, of course, well known. However, there is no evidenceepigraphical or otherwisethat the Patriarch operated in a similar manner. See MacMullen, Roman Imperial Building, 20735; Mitchell, Imperial Building, 1825. 43. See L. Levine, Jewish Patriarch, 64988.
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struction of numerous Diaspora synagogues in the third and fourth centuries, because we could assume that these Jewish communities enjoyed the aid and support of a powerful oce with considerable Imperial recognition. Finally, such an assumption might even account for some of the similarities among ancient synagogues everywhere, particularly in their use of common Jewish symbols and perhaps in their orientation. The above, unfortunately, must be relegated to mere speculation for the present. We can only conclude at this juncture that there were times and places when the oce of the Patriarch was a signicant factor in synagogue aairs. Few can question that this was the case in many fourth-century locales. However, the extent of this Patriarchal involvement, both geographical and chronological, is unclear. Ironically, it was not long before the disappearance of the oce, ca. 425, that the Patriarch reached the apogee of his prestige and powera status that, if it had continued, undoubtedly would have allowed for considerable inuence on the later Byzantine synagogue.
thirteen
he nature and extent of rabbinic involvement in, and inuence on, the synagogue in Late Antiquity are of cardinal importance not only for understanding how the synagogue functioned, but also for gaining a perspective on the status of the sages in Jewish society of this period.1 In earlier studies of Jewish history in the Greco-Roman and Byzantine eras, it had often been assumed that the sages were the dominant religious and social force within Jewish society. This has been asserted with regard to the Pharisees in the pre-70 era and the talmudic sages in the post-destruction period of Roman Palestine.2 Some have carried this assumption over to the Diaspora as well, applying it to such areas as the study of Torah in Rome and Aphrodisias and the art of the Dura Europos synagogue. Kraeling,
1. See, for example, L. Levine, Sages and the Synagogue, 20122; and, more generally, idem, Rabbinic Class, 4347; S. J. D. Cohen, Place of the Rabbi, 15773; Hezser, Social Fragmentation, 23451; idem, Social Structure, 21424; as well as Urbach, Sages, I, 60320; Beer, Issachar and Zebulun, 16780. 2. Alon, Jews, Judaism and the Classical World, 22 n. 11. While Alon makes this statement only with regard to the Pharisees, this viewpoint is assumed in all of his writings and by those who have adopted his approach. See, for example, idem, Jews in Their Land, I, 308; S. Safrai, Recovery of the Jewish Community, 2739. See also Oppenheimer, Restoration of the Jewish Community, 8092; idem, Galilee, passim. Such an assumption is likewise implicit in Urbach, Rabbinical Laws of Idolatry, passim, who arguescontra Goodenoughthat Jewish art was not antithetical to rabbinic Judaism but even had the sages approval. See also the comments of Fine in this regard (From Meeting House, 28; Holy Place, 147).
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followed by Schubert and others, assumes that the Dura artist (or artists) was inuenced by rabbinic midrashic traditions; Reynolds and Tannenbaum detect the inuence of rabbinic cultural values and institutions in the Aphrodisias inscription; and Feldman assumes that rabbinic Judaism was well known in Asia Minor.3 At the same time, there has been a countertrend these past decades, advocating a far more circumspect view with regard to rabbinic inuence generally and to the synagogue in particular. Two important studies, appearing in the 1950s and coming from entirely dierent perspectives, have had a powerful inuence on recent discussions of Pharisaic and rabbinic status in antiquity. One is M. Smiths pathbreaking article claiming that the Pharisees were just one of a number of pre-70 sects, and not the dominant force in the religious life of the masses.4 At the same time, Goodenough was publishing his multivolume Jewish Symbols, wherein he argued, on the basis of Jewish artistic remains from synagogues and cemeteries, that the rabbis of Late Antiquity were a marginal group with little or no impact on wider Jewish society.5 The question raised by these seminal studiesthough not necessarily the answershave remained central to the scholarly agenda right up to the present. The degree of rabbinic inuence on the ancient synagogue is far more complex and varied than any sweeping and facile generalization between these poles. First of all, not all rabbis were cut from the same cloth. They diered from one another in personality, socioeconomic standing, social context (including urban versus rural backgrounds), political outlook, and degree of religious stringency; some were more involved in communal life, others less so. Moreover, they had varying attitudes toward the non-rabbinic world, be it Jewish or non-Jewish. Secondly, there is the chronological factor; the cataclysmic changes that aected the Jews at large in the rst four or ve centuries c.e. had major repercussions on the rabbinic class as well. For example, the period between the second century on the one hand, and the third and fourth on the other, was distinguished by a major shift in the attitudes of many sages vis--vis their involvement in the wider Jewish communitynot only regarding their overall attitude toward communal aairs, but also their actual participation in these areas.6 Finally, there is a geographical factor. Palestinian sources describe a rabbinic elite in far greater contact with the surrounding society ( Jewish and non-Jewish) than does the Bavli, our only Babylonian source. In the latter, the sages are regularly depicted ensconced in their relatively isolated yeshiva world, having limited interaction with outsiders. Another geographical consideration distinguishes between areas that may have been more
3. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 35160; Schubert, Jewish Pictorial Traditions, 17188; Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 2537; Feldman, Jew and Gentile, 6974. 4. M. Smith, Palestinian Judaism, 7381. 5. See his summary, Jewish Symbols, XII, 18498. 6. According to R. Jeremiah, He who is involved in communal matters is like one who studies Torah (Y Berakhot 5, 1, 8d). See also my Rabbinic Class, 2342; Hezser, Social Structure, 240.
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aected by rabbinic values and practices than others. For example, is the Galilee comparable in this respect to other regions in Palestine? And what are we to make of regions where there is almost no evidence of rabbinic presence, such as Dura Europos or the rest of the far-ung Roman Diaspora? As regards the synagogue specically, besides dierences among the rabbis, one must distinguish between various aspects of this institution. Are we speaking of rabbinic inuence on the actual physical building, its style, plan, and interior design, its administrative and political leadership, the responsibility for its many activities (educational, social, judicial, etc.), or on the institutions religious dimension? Even if we are to assume some sort of inuence in the last-mentioned area, were all liturgical components (prayer, Torah reading, targum etc.) equally aected? One further caveat to consider in this regard is the very dierent impression of rabbinic involvement in the synagogue that is gained from various sources. Rabbinic literature tells us a great deal about the institution and rabbinic activity therein. Based on these sources alone, it is all too easy to slip into the assumption of extensive rabbinic involvement in, and inuence on, the synagogue. Sages are noted visiting, functioning, and at times determining policy for certain synagogue activities. However, we must ask whether rabbinic involvement in the synagogue was indeed the norm or whether only a small number of sages were actually active in its aairs and, if so, when and where did they live? 7 Furthermore, what are the implications when no mention is made of rabbinic involvement? Are we to assume that it simply did not exist or that it was merely taken for granted? Of no less importance are instances when information culled from rabbinic literature contradicts evidence derived from other literary or archaeological sources. How are these contradictions to be explained? Needless to say, non-rabbinic sources must be given a chance to speak for themselves, and not just viewed through the prism of rabbinic material. The more information that comes to light reecting a social, cultural, or religious orientation dierent from that conveyed by rabbinic sources, the less likely it is that the sages inuence was signicant, much less pervasive. What is called for is an eort to gain as wide a perspective as possible, which is crucial in trying to reach compelling historical conclusions. These are some of the issues at the heart of the discussion below regarding the relationship between the rabbis and the synagogue.
NON-RABBINIC SOURCES
The information culled from non-rabbinic sources regarding rabbinic involvement in the synagogue, although mostly of negative import, is nevertheless of interest and mer7. For a similar methodological issue, this time with regard to Byzantine hagiography, see Brown, Authority and the Sacred, 5965.
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its presentation. Although in essence ex silentio, these sources appear to make a forceful statement. Many administrative, religious, and honorary oces and titles are noted but never with regard to talmudic rabbis. Such sources can be divided into three categories: non-Jewish literary sources, archaeological material, and Jewish non-rabbinic literary evidence. Let us examine each in turn. The relevant non-Jewish sources are rather late, stemming from the fourth and early fth centuries, and are primarily of three sorts: the writings of church fathers who comment on the synagogue, edicts preserved in the Theodosian Code, and fourth-century pagan sources that refer in passing to this institution. A number of church fathers from this periodJohn Chrysostom, Epiphanius, and Jeromemention synagogue ocials and other communal functionaries, especially the Patriarch (see above, Chap. 12), albeit infrequently. They take note of various synagogue practices,8 although Jewish leaders or groups are rarely identied. Epiphanius mentions the Pharisees, archisynagogue, azzan, priests, presbyters, and the apostoli of the Patriarch, who had the authority to remove each of the above; Jerome notes the magistrorum synagoge, Pharisees, apostles, and praepositi sapientissimi.9 However, the sages as such, either individually or collectively, are never mentioned in connection with the synagogue. The reference to Pharisees is enigmatic; were these the contemporary sages, or possibly those called as such by Josephus and in the New Testament? The Theodosian Code similarly addresses synagogue-related aairs on a number of occasions and notes specic oces. Edicts from the year 330 speak about Patriarchs, presbyters, archisynagogues, and fathers of synagogues; from 392, about primates of the Law; from 396, 404, and 415, about the Patriarchs; from 397, about Patriarchs, archisynagogues, patriarchs, presbyters, and others involved in the rite of the religion (sacramentum); and from 399, about Patriarchs, archisynagogues, presbyters, and apostles.10 Never are the sages per se mentioned as a recognizable factor in synagogue life. Other fourth8. Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 97127; S. Krauss, Jews in the Works of the Church Fathers, part 1, 122; part 2, 8299, 22561; Neuman, Jerome and the Jews, 13750. 9. EpiphaniusPanarion 30, 11, 4. Jeromemagistrorum synagoge: In Zach. II, 6, 9. Pharisees: Letter 112. Apostles: Comm. on Galatians 1:1. Praepositi sapientissimi: Letter 121, 10, 1920. The last reference in Jerome, quite polemical in content, comes the closest to pointing to the rabbis and has been construed as such by S. Krauss (Jews in the Works of the Church Fathers, part 2, 229). Jerome denes the praepositi as those who teach Pharisaic traditions (deuterosis, i.e., Mishnah). However, the identication of those being referred to is conjectural, as these references are far from being specic. The main teacher noted by Jerome is one Bar Anina or anina, who is unknown in rabbinic literature (Neuman, Jerome and the Jews, 11416). Jeromes reference to the Patriarchs collection of monies in the Diaspora for sages (Contra Vigilantius 13) may well refer to his own court, and not to the talmudic sages. On the use of the above-mentioned titles throughout the Roman Diaspora, see Juster, Les Juifs, I, 44256. 10. Cod. Theod. 16, 8, 2, 4, 8, 13, 14, 15. See Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, nos. 9, 20, 24, 27, 30, 32, 41.
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century pagan sources note Patriarchs, archisynagogues, and others, but here as well rabbis are not mentioned.11 Thus, the above sources, which relate rst and foremost to the Roman Diaspora, know nothing of the involvement of sages in any aspect of synagogue life. Turning now to the archaeological material, we nd a similar picture emerging from the not inconsiderable amount of epigraphical data at hand. Of the hundreds of synagogue inscriptions, none mentions any sage known to us from rabbinic literature. True enough, the title rabbi appears not infrequently, particularly in Palestinian inscriptions in Aramaic and Hebrew. However, as has been argued on a number of occasions, this title was not limited to talmudic sages alone, but was used as an honorary designation for a wealthy donor, a learned individual, a member of the Patriarchal circle, or one appointed as a judge.12 Thus, according to the epigraphical evidence, synagogues were built and run by laypersons and not, it would seem, by talmudic rabbis. Moreover, synagogue art does not appear to reect rabbinic attitudes of Late Antiquity. Art per se is not a major subject of discussion in rabbinic literature, and it is mentioned only with regard to questions of idolatry or the making and enjoyment of (or deriving benet from) pagan images. The relatively few sources that address the subject of gural representation indicate that, with rare exceptions, rabbis were either opposed to or, at best, grudgingly accepting of this phenomenon (see below). Even depictions of the seven-branched menorah as it had once existed in the Temple were forbidden, at least as regards tannaitic sources quoted in the Bavli;13 symbols such as the globe, scepter, and bird were associated with pagan worship and hence prohibited.14 Notwithstanding these rabbinic objections, the above motifs, especially the menorah, appear with relative frequency in ancient Jewish art.15
11. For example, Libanius (M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 58997); SHA (ibid., 630, 63641); and Palladius (Life of John Chrysostom 15). Cf. Jacobs, Die Institution, passim. 12. See esp. S. J. D. Cohen, Epigraphical Rabbis, 117; Shanks, Is the Title Rabbi, 33745; idem, Origins of the Title, 15257; Zeitlin, Reply, 34549; idem, Title Rabbi, 15860. 13. B Rosh Hashanah 24ab; B Avodah Zarah 43a; B Menaot 28b. 14. M Avodah Zarah 3, 1; T Avodah Zarah 5, 1 (p. 468); Y Avodah Zarah 3, 1, 42c. See Urbach, Rabbinical Laws of Idolatry, 23845. 15. On the menorah in archaeological nds, see, inter alia, Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 7177; Negev, Chronology of the Seven-Branched Menorah, 193210; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 23656; Hachlili and Merhav, Menorah in the First and Second Temple Times, 25667. On the use of the zodiac, see Hachlili, op. cit., 3019; eadem, Zodiac, 6177. See also Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, 3943. In other areas, the visual arts are not in sync with rabbinic behavior; e.g., there is no distinctive Jewish garb in the Dura paintingssee Revel-Neher, Image of the Jew, 96. On the non-rabbinic character of some aspects of Jewish art, especially the zodiac and Helios scenes, see Urbach, Rabbinical Laws of Idolatry, 23845; J. Baumgarten, Art in the Synagogue, 196206. Foerster has argued that the zodiac signs are endemic to Jewish tradition from the Second Temple period
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On the basis of the above, we could ask in which synagogues discovered to date might most rabbis have felt comfortable. In the absence of any clear-cut embracement of gural art by even one sage, I would hazard a guess that most would have preferred the artistically more conservative synagogues, those with little or no gural decoration, such as the ones at En Gedi, Jericho, Khirbet Shema, Meiron, and Qatzrin. The synagogue at Reov, with its aniconic art, almost exclusive use of Hebrew and Aramaic, and halakhic inscriptions, would almost certainly have been to the liking of most sages. The third type of source is the Jewish non-rabbinic literary material, of which we have a considerable amount at hand: late Byzantine apocalyptic texts, Hekhalot mystical tracts, and books of magic such as Sefer Harazim (The Book of Secrets) and arba de-Moshe (The Sword of Moses).16 How these circles are related to the talmudic rabbis, if at all, is one of the many unresolved problems in the research of this period. Moreover, it is unclear how much of this material is relevant to the synagogue. Is there a connection, for example, between the role of Helios in Sefer Harazim and his depiction on the synagogue mosaic oor at ammat Tiberias and elsewhere? 17 And how is the liturgical material in the Hekhalot texts related to contemporary synagogue practice? One type of source, however, is unequivocally of synagogue provenancethe targum. Scholars have long recognized discrepancies between targumic literature and rabbinic sources.18 In fact, there are specic instances in which sages have objected to particular translations, yet these renditions often appear in Targum Pseudo-Jonathan.19 One such discrepancy between the targumic tradition and the sages deals specically with the use of gural representation in synagogues; the targum reects a more forthcoming attitude, essentially allowing for gural representations to appear on synagogue mosaic oors: You shall not make any idols for yourself and you shall not erect any statues or pillars, nor shall you place a gured stone in your land for the purpose of prostration, but you may place a stoa [here, probably a mosaic pavement] impressed with drawings and gures
onward. He is probably correct, although the real issue is not the zodiac signs per se (see Deuteronomy Rabbah 1, 16 [p. 16]), but their non-Jewish artistic representation and, more particularly, the representation of Helios and his accoutrements, as at ammat Tiberias; see his Zodiac in Ancient Synagogues, 22534. 16. Schrer, History, III, 34379, with especial attention to Ibn Shmuel, Midreshei Geulah, and Sepher Ha-Razim (trans. M. A. Morgan). 17. A connection rst suggested in M. Smith, Observations, 15860. See L. Levine, Ancient SynagoguesHistorical Introduction, 9. 18. Not all targumim are similar in this regard. It is generally acknowledged that Onkelos and Neoti are much more in line with the rabbinic corpora than Pseudo-Jonathan. See R. Kasher, Aramaic Targumim, 7379. 19. See, for example, the statement of R. Yose b. R. Abun in Y Berakhot 5, 3, 9c and Targum PseudoJonathan of Lev. 22:28. For other examples, see Bacher, Targum, 58; Lieberman Hazzanut Yannai, 22223; Alexander, Rabbinic Lists, 17791.
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on the oors of your sanctuaries [ ,i.e., oors of your synagogues],20 though not to bow down to it [for purposes of worship], for I am the Lord your God. 21 In addition, many of the targumic elaborations would seem to refer to popular customs, practices, and beliefs that were not necessarily rabbinically inspired.22 For the most part, and given the harmonizing proclivities characteristic of former generations, it has been assumed that the targum often might reect either the personal opinion of a particular sage or meturgeman or, alternatively, an early stage of rabbinic halakhic opinion.23 Both of these approaches posit that rabbinic thought as reected in talmudic literature was, as a matter of course, normative in the synagogue. However, in light of the above discussion, it seems more likely that the targum often reects non-rabbinic conceptions and practices prevalent in Jewish society at that time. Thus, our review of non-rabbinic evidence oers a distinctly dierent picture of the relationship between rabbis and synagogues than has ordinarily been assumed. On the basis of the above evidence, it would seem that in most areas concerning this institution the building, art, donors, and leadership, and even some liturgical practicesrabbinic involvement was minimal, at best.
RABBINIC SOURCES
Rabbinic evidence itself is far from conclusive regarding the sages relationship to the synagogue; in fact, what emerges is a rather complex picture of their involvement in this institution. In some respects these sources conrm the picture gained from the nonrabbinic sources cited above; in others, however, they shed a rather dierent light.
20. Chilton, Isaiah Targum, 11. Cf., however, the interpretation in Fine, Iconoclasm, 18394. 21. Targum Pseudo-Jonathan of Lev. 26:2. See Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 11623; Blidstein, Prostration and Mosaics, 3739; M. L. Klein, Palestinian Targum, 4445. 22. Shinan, Embroidered Targum, 10467; and below, Chap. 16. 23. The former option was adopted by Albeck (Apocryphal Halakha, 93104). The latter was advocated by Kahle (Cairo Geniza, 206); Diez-Macho (Recently Discovered Palestinian Targum, 22245); Heinemann (Early Halakhah, 11422); Faur (Targumim and Halakha, 1926); and, generally, York (Dating of Targumic Literature, 4962); McNamara (Targums, 85661). 24. T Megillah 3, 22 (p. 360).
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synagogues found in close proximity in southern Judaea that were built in this manner,25 only three or four of the remaining one hundred or so buildings in RomanByzantine Palestine have their main (or only) entrance to the east. ( ) One rabbinic tradition prescribes changing the usual seating arrangements within the synagogue in times of mourning: those sitting in the north should sit in the south and vice versa.26 However, it is almost impossible to anchor this tradition in any known archaeological reality, since entrances were almost always oriented toward or away from Jerusalem, i.e., to the north or to the south, and thus benches were invariably placed on the eastern and western sides of the building (and in the Galilee, often to the north as well). Only in a very small number of cases were benches also found on the buildings southern side. Thus, determining the Sitz im Leben of this rabbinic tradition is almost impossible. ( ) The statement that the elders are to sit facing the congregation with their back to the holy (probably a reference to Jerusalem and the site of the Temple) does not nd expression in almost any synagogue building of Late Antiquity.27 Only in the extant pre-70 Judaean buildings and in several later ones were benches found lining the wall facing Jerusalem.28 From the liturgical realm, rabbinic literature preserves a dramatic account of a practice in one synagogue setting that was contrary to contemporary rabbinic views. In a Caesarean synagogue, where it was customary to recite the Shema in Greek, we are told that two visiting rabbis reacted in very dierent ways.29 One was openly hostile, the other more tolerantat least post facto. Levi bar iyta was incensed enough to consider trying to bring the objectionable service to a halt, while R. Yosi responded that it was better that the congregation recite the Shema in Greek than not at all. Ironically, neither statement of these third-century sages reects the more lenient position of the Mishnah, which explicitly makes allowance for the Shema to be recited in any language.30 Rabbinic literature, as noted above, also preserves a number of instances in which prac25. In addition to the well-known examples at Susiya and Eshtemoa (see L. Levine, Ancient Synagogues Revealed, 12028), two others from the same area have been discovered in recent years, at Maon and Anim. See reports of Z. Ilan and Amit, in NEAEHL, passim. 26. B Moed Qatan 22b. 27. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360). 28. See the articles by Yadin, Foerster, Gutman, and Maoz in L. Levine, Ancient Synagogues Revealed, 1941. Later examples would include Dura Europos and En Neshut; see Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 1617, and NEAEHL, respectively. 29. Y Sotah 7, 1, 21b. 30. M Sotah 7, 1. However, these sages attitude corresponds to the view of R. Judah I quoted in the Yerushalmi just before the Caesarean account (see previous note), namely, that the Shema ought to be recited in Hebrew.
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tices revolving around the delivery of the targum in the synagogue were at odds with rabbinic conceptions and dictates.31 The Yerushalmi, for example, relates a series of stories about local targumic practices that ran counter to rabbinic prescriptions. Three such instances involved R. Samuel b. R. Isaac: in the rst, he rebuked a meturgeman for translating the scriptural reading while standing by a column (instead of next to the Torah reader); in the second, one and the same person read from the Torah and translated the Torah portion (instead of two dierent people); in the third, the meturgeman read the scriptural translation from a book, instead of oering a spontaneous translation.32 The responses of these functionaries, or of the congregation generally, to R. Samuels directives are not revealed. The account regarding R. Simeon of Tarbanat demonstrates how one rabbi-meturgeman dared to defy the will of the congregation, and paid dearly for it.33 When asked by the congregation to break up each verse when translating, in order to allow time for the adults to explain what was being read to the children present, R. Simeon decided to consult with his teacher, R. anina. The latter armed the rabbinic dictum that each verse should be translated as a unit with no break. When R. Simeon resumed his targumic activities in accordance with R. aninas advice, he was summarily dismissed by the congregation.34 A further example of synagogue practice defying the rabbinic prescription noted above is evidenced in the art of the fourth-century ammat Tiberias building. The zodiac mosaic features a depiction of Helios holding a sphere (i.e., the earth) and a sta (i.e., a scepter; g. 85) in his left hand, symbols explicitly prohibited by the sages:
All images are forbidden because they are worshipped [at least] once a year. So [says] R. Meir. But the sages say: Only that is forbidden which holds a sta or bird or sphere in its hand. R. Simeon b. Gamaliel says: Anything holding an object [is forbidden]. 35
31. See R. Kasher, Aramaic Targumim, 7577. 32. Y Megillah 4, 1, 74d. This same R. Samuel b. R. Isaac purportedly instructed teachers on other occasions as well; see Numbers Rabbah 12, 3; Midrash on Psalms 91, 3 (pp. 39798). Rabbinic objections to the use of a written translation clearly indicate that targumim existed at this time, as we see, for example, in M Yadaim 4, 5; T Shabbat 13, 2 (p. 57); B Shabbat 115a; as well as in evidence from Qumran (Schiman, Reclaiming, 21415). 33. Y Megillah 4, 5, 75b. 34. It is not entirely clear what R. Simeon was doing when he provoked the anger of the local community: translating a passage from the Torah? the haftarah? teaching children? The terminology is vague. Following this incident, the Talmud brings in the opinions of two other sages, one apparently siding with the congregation, the other praising R. Simeon for his tenacity. 35. M Avodah Zarah 3, 1. On ,see Jastrow, Dictionary, 1284; for the biblical period and its ancient Near Eastern context, see Garr, In His Own Image, 13265. Cf. Urbach, Rabbinical Laws of Idolatry, 23839. The depiction of nudity on this synagogues mosaic oorincluding a male phalluswas also undoubtedly not to the rabbis liking; see Satlow, Jewish Constructions of Nakedness, 42954, esp. 43536.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
85. Representation of Helios in a mosaic oor from the ammat Tiberias synagogue. Note the halo and rays over his head, his right hand raised in triumph, and his left hand holding a sphere and a sta.
On a number of occasions, sages took issue with certain synagogue practices. The Mishnah lists a series of instances in which prayers recited in local synagogues were objectionable to the sages. Saying we give thanks ( )twice raised suspicions of dualism, adding a prayer for Gods mercy on a birds nest (construed to mean that He was only the God of mercy), or saying that His name be associated only with good (and not with evil as well) may have opened the door to a form of dualism; all the above were thus considered problematic.36 A prayer leader wearing only white was declared unacceptable (was this reminiscent of a sectarian association?), as was the priest who insisted on blessing the congregation barefoot (shades of Temple practice that were to be eschewed). Any deviation from the rabbinically prescribed way in which a man placed the phylacteries on his head and hand was declared invalid and termed sectarian (73.) ,
36. M Berakhot 5, 3; M Megillah 4, 9. On these rabbinic traditions, see A. F. Segal, Two Powers in Heaven, 98108. 37. M Megillah 4, 8. The distinction made by the sages between these two types of sectarianism is not altogether clear. See the comments by Rashi and the Rambam, loc. cit. Wearing white (i.e., linen) clothing recalls Essene sectarian behavior; see Josephus, War 2, 123; S. Krauss, Qadmoniot Ha-Talmud, II/2, 89.
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R. Yoanan and R. Yosethe latter despite the vigorous objections of R. Aachose not to protest when, contrary to their practice, the Shema was recited more than three hours after sunrise on a fast day.38 Some sages objected vehemently to synagogues belonging to ordinary people (ammei ha-aretz), as well as to the latters practice of referring to the holy ark as arana and to the synagogue as bet am.39 In Babylonia as well, it was the custom in one particular synagogue to bow down; however, Rav, who had just arrived from Palestine and was unfamiliar with this practice, refused to do so.40 We read of at least one instance in which rabbinic law was violated by dragging a bench in a synagogue on the Sabbath; R. Jeremiah was involved in one such incident in Bostra.41 Finally, Resh Laqishs comparison of a preacher in the synagogue to a theater mime entertaining the masses reects a rather condescending attitude, to say the least, toward this aspect of synagogue worship.42
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the situation in Late Antiquity, whatever the reality of the pre-70 period might have been.45 R. Pappa claims that it is permissible to convert a synagogue into an academy but not vice versa, while R. Joshua b. Levi states that one can sell a synagogue in order to buy an academy but not vice versa.46 In each dictum, a clear-cut distinctionin addition to a xed hierarchyis maintained between these two institutions. The Bavli distinguishes between a place where one promotes Torah study ( ,) i.e., the academy, and a place where one promotes prayer (,) i.e., the synagogue.47 A statement by R. Isaac is also indicative of this distinction: Thus God moves from synagogue to synagogue, from academy to academy, as is the following statement in Midrash on Psalms: Thus our sages taught us: Anyone who leaves the synagogue and enters the academy is referred to by the verse They will go from strength to strength [Ps. 84:8]. Moreover, such a person is considered worthy of receiving the Divine Presence. 48 Nevertheless, while some sages did frequent the synagogue, others seem to have studiously avoided it, preferring instead the bet midrash. The fact that some sages found the synagogue setting less congenial to their spiritual needs may be inferred from the repeated rabbinic statements urging colleagues to pray in a synagogue setting.49 Indeed, it would have been natural and understandable for some sages to shy away from such public settings, preferring either the intimacy of their homes or the familiarity of the academy, where they spent most of their time. Several rabbinic dicta clearly indicate this preference for prayer in an academy setting.50 R. Isaac once asked R. Naman:
Why does the master not come to the synagogue and pray? He responded: I am not able. He asked him: Let the master assemble ten people and pray in their company [i.e., in a congregational setting]. He responded: It is too much trouble for me [ . Then why not say to the messenger of the congregation [ :] Come and inform me when the congregation is praying? He responded: Why [are you making] all this fuss? He said: For R. Yoanan said in the name of R. Simeon ben Yoai . . . When is an acceptable time? When the congregation prays. 51 And Abbaye said: At rst I would study in my home and pray in the synagogue. Once I heard a statement of R. iyya bar Ami quoting Ulla: Since the day the Temple was destroyed,
45. T Sukkah 2, 10 (p. 265); see B Sukkah 41b. 46. B Megillah 26b27a; Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. 47. B Megillah 27a. 48. PRK 5, 8 (p. 90); Midrash on Psalms 84, 4 (p. 186a). Contrary to Httenmeisters suggestion to identify these two institutions (Synagogue and Beth-Ha-midrash, 3844), see the strongand in my opinion, correctreservations of Oppenheimer (Beth Ha-midrash, 4548) and S. Safrai (Halakha and Reality, 49). See also Urman, Synagogue and Beth Ha-Midrash, 5375. 49. Y Berakhot 5, 1, 8d; B Berakhot 6b8a; and below. 50. B Berakhot 8a. 51. B Berakhot 7b8a; and the textual variant in MS Munich (see Diqduqei Soferim).
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the Holy One, Blessed be He, has nothing in this world except the four cubits of the halakha alone; I pray only in the place where I study. Although there were thirteen synagogues in Tiberias, R. Ami and R. Asi prayed only between the pillars where they were accustomed to study.52
The basic distinction between these two institutions did not preclude use of the synagogue by sages for their own purposes. There were instances in which this communal building served their needs as well, and they utilized it for their own rabbinic agenda.53
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Another tradition, in all probability more reective of mainstream rabbinic views on this matter, is contained in a tannaitic midrash on Exodus (the Mekhilta), which states unequivocally that no gural representation is permissible in any way, shape, or form. In commenting on the Second Commandment, the following is recorded:
You shall not make a sculptured image [Exod. 20:4]. One should not make one that is engraved, but perhaps one may make one that is solid? Scripture says: Nor any likeness [ibid.]. One should not make a solid one, but perhaps one may plant something? Scripture says: You shall not plant an asherah [Deut. 16:21]. One should not plant something, but perhaps one may make it [i.e., an image] of wood? Scripture says: Any kind of wood [ibid.]. One should not make it of wood, but perhaps one may make it of stone? Scripture says: And a gured stone [Lev. 26:1]. One should not make it of stone, but perhaps one may make it of silver? Scripture says: Gods of silver [Exod. 20:20]. One should not make it of silver, but perhaps one may make it of gold? Scripture says: Gods of gold [ibid.]. One should not make it of gold, but perhaps one may make it of copper, tin, or lead? Scripture says: Do not make molten gods [Lev. 19:4]. One should not make an image of any of the above, but perhaps one may make an image of any sort of likeness? Scripture says: Lest you act wickedly and make for yourselves a sculptured image in any likeness whatsoever [Deut. 4:16]. One should not make an image in any likeness whatsoever, but perhaps one may make an image of cattle or a bird? Scripture says: The form of any beast on earth, the form of any winged bird [ibid., 17]. Perhaps one should not make an image of any of these, but perhaps one may make an image of a sh, locust, unclean animals or reptiles [ ?] Scripture says: The form of anything that creeps on the ground, the form of any sh that is in the waters [ibid., 18]. Perhaps one should not make an image of any one of these, but one may make an image of the sun and moon, stars and planets? Scripture says: Lest you lift your eyes toward heaven, etc. [ibid., 19]. One should not make an image of any of these, but perhaps one may make an image of angels, cherubim, and other heavenly creatures ( ?) Scripture says: Which are in the heavens [Exod. 20:4]. If in the heavens [is intended], perhaps one may make an image of the sun, moon, stars, and planets? Scripture says: Above [ibid.] neither the images of angels, nor of cherubs, nor of heavenly creatures. One should not make an image of any of these, but perhaps one may make an image of the abyss, darkness, and deep darkness [ ?]Scripture says: And that which is under the earth [ibid.] or in the waters under the earth [ibid.]this comes to include even the reected image [ ,]according to R. Aqiva. Others say it comes to include the shavriri [i.e., the spirit causing blindness]. Scripture goes to such great lengths in pursuit of the evil inclination so as not to leave any room for allowing it.57
The dierence between these almost contemporaneous traditions regarding gural art is indeed striking. The Mekhiltas total and absolute ban on the making of any sort of
Roman ocer (procurator of Caesarea? the emperor?) on a pagan holiday. So as not to oend the bearer of this gift, he kept only one dinar and returned the rest. Resh Laqish objected to keeping even one. See also Y Avodah Zarah 1, 1, 39b; B Avodah Zarah 6b; and Blidstein, Roman Gift, 15052. 57. Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Yitro, 6 (pp. 22425).
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image may even preclude any contact with them whatsoever, on the suspicion of potential idolatry.58 It is thus advocating a distinctly conservative approach; the practice among Jews in the preceding centuries should continue.59 Behind this assertion lies the assumption that the Jews should remove themselves as much as possible from the pagan world of images. Such a distancing from any sort of gural image is emphasized even more strongly in a midrash that forbids any kind of representationeven for decorative purposes (:)
Our sages have taught: You shall not make [together] with Me gods of silver, nor should you make for yourselves gods of gold [Exod. 20:20]. If, with respect to worshipping them, it has already been said, You shall not make any sculptured image nor any likeness [ibid., 4], how, then, should I interpret the verse: You shall not make [together] with Me? You should not say: Just as others make decorations by placing a replica of the sun and moon and serpent [or dragon, ]on the gates of the city and its entrances, so, too, will I act similarly. Scripture says: You shall not make [together] with Medo not make them, even for decorative purposes.60
The account of Rabban Gamaliel implies a willingness to deal with each instance of gural art on its own terms, while he himself, as noted, tended toward a lenient position. Since the absence of gural representation had heretofore constituted one of the cardinal distinctions between Jewish and non-Jewish societies,61 these dierent viewpoints reect the various ways in which the sages (and perhaps Jewish society in general) were now grappling with this reality. Rabban Gamalielperhaps because of the new historical reality of the post-70 period and the increased contact with non-Jewish society, because of his own prominent position, or owing to personal proclivityadvocated a reassess58. I have interpreted this passage, as have Goodenough, B. Cohen, and Urbach, to mean that the ban includes all gural representation (Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 324; B. Cohen, Art in Jewish Law, 168; Urbach, Rabbinical Laws of Idolatry, 235). See also Goodenough, Rabbis and Jewish Art, 26979. Blidstein (Tannaim and Plastic Art, 1920) and S. Stern (Figurative Art and Halakha, 408 9), on the other hand, suggest that only cultic objects were intended. For a fuller treatment of the issue at hand, see my forthcoming Visual Judaism. 59. See L. Levine, Jerusalem, 14243. 60. Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 20:29 (p. 442). Although embedded in a late midrashic compilation, this source dovetails with the above-quoted source from the Mekhilta of R. Ishmael. Moreover, a similar prohibition appears elsewhere, in Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 34:14 (p. 711), and has been assumed by J. N. Epstein to have been part of the tannaitic midrash Mekhilta of R. Simeon bar Yoai (p. 222 in his edition). A similar tradition appears in Midrash Hagadol, Deuteronomy 5:8 (p. 105): You shall not make any sculptured image or any likeness. This is a warning to one who would make an idolatrous object for himself, whether he actually makes it with his own hands or others make it for him. And even if he does not worship it, it still is prohibited. Homann includes this source in his Midrash Tannaim (p. 20). Rabbinic tradition also knows of several individuals (referred to as holy) who refused to look at coins that usually bore the images of rulers; see Y Megillah 3, 2, 74a; B Avodah Zarah 50a; B Pesaim 104a. 61. Tacitus, History 5, 5, 4 (M. Stern, GLAJJ, II, 26, and comments on p. 43). On the aniconic nature of Jewish art at the end of the Second Temple period, see above, Chap. 7.
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ment of the previous prohibition with the purpose of allowing for greater leeway. He interpreted the prohibition as referring to images bearing cultic signicance only, just as the Decalogue itself, as well as Deut. 4:1519, might be understood.62 Contrasting views among third-century sages as to how Jews should relate to pagan images are reected in the attitudes of R. Yoanan and Resh Laqish.63 When in Bostra, the capital of Provincia Arabia, Resh Laqish was asked whether it was permissible for a Jew to draw water from the local nymphaeum even though it displayed many statues, especially that of Aphrodite, and even though the place was used on occasion for idolatrous worship. Resh Laqish immediately forbade such usage, thus forcing observant Jews to walk a considerable distance to draw water. However, when he told his teacher and colleague, R. Yoanan, what had happened, the latter responded by ordering him to immediately return to Bostra and rescind his decision. R. Yoanan then issued a ruling that any statue or image in the public domain (such as a nymphaeum, which often stood at the main intersection of a city) was not to be considered idolatrous. In other words, in order for Jews to function within a contemporary Roman city, allowance had to be made for the many statues that inevitably graced its streets and plazas, the overwhelming majority of which were for aesthetic, and not overtly religious, purposes. The above examples clearly indicate that rabbinic circles encompassed a broad spectrum of attitudes and practices relating to Jewish interaction with the outside world and its culture, including the issue of gural representation.64 This situation was in many ways similar to that encountered by the church fathers. While Clement could embrace the large Hellenistic-Roman world and mediate its seemingly conicting claims vis--vis Christianity, Tertullian tended to emphasize the dichotomy and inherent irreconcilability.65
62. Josephus makes two statements that reect this distinction. In Antiquities 3, 91, he summarizes the second commandment as forbidding the making of an image of any living creature for adoration. In Against Apion 2, 75, however, he notes that Moses forbade the making of images, alike of any living creature. Rabban Gamaliels accommodation to gural images may also be reected in second- and thirdcentury coinage of the two Jewish Galilean cities, Sepphoris and Tiberias, undoubtedly minted under the auspices of those cities Jewish aristocracy. In both places, pagan imagery was invoked. See Meshorer, City-Coins, 3437; and my forthcoming Visual Judaism. 63. Y Sheviit 8, 11, 38bc; B Avodah Zarah 58b59a; and comments in Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 13233; Blidstein, R. Yohanan, Idolatry and Public Privilege, 15461. 64. There is no more striking an example of the diversity regarding gural representation, at least within Patriarchal circles, than in the comparison of catacombs 14 and 20 at Bet Shearim; the former has many human and animal depictions, the latter none. See my forthcoming Visual Judaism. 65. Greer, Alien Citizens, 3956. In general, the attitude of the church fathers toward gural art was ambivalent. It is generally assumed that from Tertullian and Clement down to Epiphanius, Jerome, and Augustine, church leaders looked askance at such representations, although they were often willing (or compelled?) to make concessions to popular practice (see Chadwick, Early Church, 27778). The degree of their fundamental antagonism toward this type of art remains unclear. While this position is generally
482
Another amoraic source, this time referring almost certainly to a synagogue setting, deals with the issue of bowing down on a mosaic oor containing images during a fastday ceremony:
Rav instructed the house of R. Aa, and R. Ami instructed his own household: When you go [to the synagogue] on a [public] fast, do not bow down as you are accustomed to [so as not to appear to be bowing to the images decorating the synagogue]. R. Yonah bowed sideways; R. Aa bowed sideways. R. Samuel said: I saw R. Abbahu bow as usual. R. Yosi said: I asked R. Abbahu: Is it not written, And a gured stone you shall not place in our land to bow down upon it [Lev. 26:1]. [The diculty concerning R. Abbahus behavior] should be solved [by applying it to a situation] wherein one has a xed place [in the synagogue] for bowing.66
Setting aside this last explanation, which a later editor has provided, it appears that R. Abbahu, contrary to other sages, was not troubled by prostrating himself (as was customary on public fast days) on a decorated synagogue oor, an attitude undoubtedly engendered by his Hellenistic acculturation.67 On the other hand, several of his colleagues were clearly uncomfortable with such an arrangement, and each found a way to sidestep the predicament. The problematics of gural art with which the sages struggled are reected in the following accounts in the Mishnah and Yerushalmi Avodah Zarah:
[If ] one nds objects bearing the gure of the sun or the gure of the moon [and] the gure of a dragon, he should get rid of them [lit., he must throw them into the Dead Sea]. Rabban Simeon b. Gamaliel says: If the objects are of value they are forbidden; if they are worthless, they are permitted. 68 R. iyya had a pitcher [or cup, pot] 69 in which Tyche [Fortuna] of Rome was depicted. He came and asked R. Yoanan, who told him: Since water covers her, it is considered an insult
assumed by most scholars, Murray (Art and the Early Church, 30345) has argued that the evidence afrming this hostility is, in reality, nonexistent. Although her position appears to be somewhat extreme, it does indicate that these leaders were as divided on this question as were their Jewish counterparts. See also Finney, Invisible God, 3968, 8693; Kitzinger, Cult of Images, 85.; Barnard, Graeco-Roman and Oriental Background, 89. 66. Y Avodah Zarah 4, 1, 43d; Blidstein, Prostration and Mosaics, 3337; Steinfeld, Prostration in Prayer, 5965. On the custom of full prostration at public fasts, see Y Sheviit 1, 7, 33b; Y Sukkah 4, 1, 54b. 67. See L. Levine, R. Abbahu, 64. Whether prostration was forbidden in order to distinguish current Jewish practice from that of the Temple or from contemporary Christianity is an open question. In this particular case, however, the problem is directly linked to representations appearing on the oors pavement. See Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 11623; Blidstein, Prostration and Mosaics, 3337. Regarding the issue of bowing in third-century Babylonia, customary in Sura but strange to Rav, who had recently arrived from Palestine, see B Megillah 22a. 68. M Avodah Zarah 3, 3. 69. See Lieberman, Greek in Jewish Palestine, 17172 (pitcher); idem, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 134 (cup); Sokolo, Dictionary, 478 (pot).
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[and therefore it can be used]. Similarly with respect to a cup [or ladle]:70 Since you dip it in water, it is considered an insult [and it also can be used]. In the days of R. Yoanan [third century], they began to depict [gural images] on the walls and he did not object; in the days of R. Abun [fourth century], they began depicting [gural images] on mosaic oors and he did not object.71
This last statement, regarding R. Yoanan and R. Abun, is most revealing since it purportedly describes the reactions of two sages to the appearance of gural art in their respective times. These two sages were obviously far from enthusiastic about this development and certainly would never have lent their support to such behavior ab initio. Nevertheless, Jews were now decorating their buildings, presumably both public and private, in such a fashion, and this process could not easily be reversed, if at all. These two rabbis, therefore, took the middle ground, neither supportive nor actively opposing, a position which might be described as one of benign resignation ( 27.) They decided simply to ignore the phenomenon; although they did not like what they saw, they could live with it.73 In light of the above, those scholars who claim to have found a reection of rabbinic values and ideas in synagogue art bear the burden of proof. The artistic material recov70. Sokolo, Dictionary, 492 (drinking cup); Jastrow, Dictionary, 371 (ladle). 71. Y Avodah Zarah 3, 3, 42d. This text follows the Genizah fragment published in J. N. Epstein, Yerushalmi Fragments, 20. 72. On this term, see Jastrow, Dictionary, 75960; Sokolo, Dictionary, 300. A similar use of this term is found in M Pesaim 4, 8; T Pesaim 3, 19 (p. 157) and parallels; M Menaot 10, 8; B Eruvin 96a and parallels. On the opposition of some Babylonian sages to Rabban Gamaliel IIs behavior, see B Rosh Hashanah 24ab; B Avodah Zarah 43ab. 73. S. Stern (Figurative Art and Halakha, 397419) suggests a rather novel thesis, namely, that the sages viewed decorative gural art with equanimity down to the end of Late Antiquity and only changed course at the time of an iconoclastic upsurge. However, in arguing his point, certain phenomena are ignored and several questionable assumptions are made: (1) Explicit historical and archaeological data regarding the almost universal avoidance of gural art for a three-hundred-year period prior to the BarKokhba revolt are ignored. The Jews in the post-70 era (rabbis included) were, in fact, heirs to a strictly aniconic religious tradition that had prevailed in Jewish society for centuries. (2) Rabbinic silence regarding gural art in the second and third centuries does not necessarily mean that they accepted this art form, but only that this phenomenon had not yet penetrated Jewish society to the extent to which it became an issue for them. (3) Stern dismisses the second- to fourth-century sources attesting to the problematics of gural art for many sages and relegates such evidence to the latest editorial stratum of the two talmuds. Then, the presumed absence of protestations to this art is taken to indicate rabbinic approval of the practice. Even then, however, the communis opinio is that the Yerushalmi was edited toward the end of the fourth century, which would place it (and its editorial comments) several hundred years before the close of Late Antiquity! (4) A series of assertions are made that challenge the regnant theories in a wide range of areas: sages were more open and accommodating to gural art than most Jews; all rabbis shared the same tolerant attitude for centuries; in the latter part of the sixth century, the sages changed their opinion, adopting a strict aniconic posture, and this occurred purportedly when paganism was on the wane.
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ered from archaeological excavations is neutral, and its meaning (assuming that there is some symbolic message) is open to many possible interpretationsto wit, the plethora of explanations for the Dura murals or for the zodiac and Helios depictions in Palestinian synagogues.74 We have already referred on several occasions to the clash between the image of Helios in ammat Tiberias and the Mishnahs prescription (Avodah Zarah 3,1). In certain cases there seems to be a considerable gap between the appearance of certain symbols in archaeological remains and their prominence (or lack thereof ) in rabbinic sources, not to speak of outright rabbinic opposition. The menorah is a classic example of this phenomenon. While rarely addressed in its contemporary appearance and functions by the sages (in contrast to numerous comments on the Tabernacle menorah described in the Torah), this object nevertheless became the most widespread Jewish symbol and was reproduced in Late Antiquity in some one thousand instances (those recorded to date) throughout Palestine and the Diaspora.75 The gap between rabbinic references to this symbol and its universal appearance in Jewish communities the world over is striking. However, this discrepancy is even greater; rabbinic opposition to replicating the Tabernacle-Temple menorah, with its seven branches (per B Rosh Hashanah 24ab and parallels), is simply ignored in the overwhelming majority of archaeological nds. Even when the same motif appears in both rabbinic literature and archaeological nds, there is no reason to assume that this depiction was rabbinic in essence or that the synagogue was an extension of rabbinic Judaism simply because a certain motif appears in both rabbinic literature and synagogue art. It may well be that the rabbis were merely elaborating on a homily or biblical exegesis known to Jewish society generally from other sources. For instance, the ames in the six branches of the menorah at the ammat Tiberias synagogue all face inward, with the central ame pointing upwarda pattern noted in the Bavli (g. 86).76 Does this mean that synagogue artists were inuenced by rabbinic dicta? Or perhaps both rabbis and artists were harking back to a common tradition? For example, the fact that the rabbis discussed the Temple and sacrices does not mean that they controlled that institution or that sacricial procedures in pre-70 Jerusalem were rabbinically mandated. Similarly, the existence of rabbinic discussions regarding the sanctity of certain books of the Bible in the rst to third centuries c.e. does not necessarily mean that the sages were the decisive authority in the process of canonization. Thus, with respect to the synagogue: to label everything in a synagogue setting that has echoes in rabbinic literature as rabbinic, and thus to assume the sages dominant inuence on synagogue decoration, is patently uncritical and unjustied. To summarize our discussion of the rabbis and synagogue art, we have seen a serious gap between the former groups opinions and the latters realities.77 The sages were not
74. See below, Chap. 17. 75. Hachlili, Menorah, xxvi. 76. B Menaot 98b. 77. Even though there is a chronological gap between rabbinic sources from the rst to fourth cen-
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86. Menorah from the ammat Tiberias synagogue with ames turned inward, toward the center.
in charge of this aspect of synagogue life, nor is there any indication that they were consulted or involved in any way in the selection process. While rabbinic opinions regarding this art were indeed multivocal, there is little question that the common thread running through them was that this art is inherently problematic and should be viewed, at best, with reservation and, at worst, with condemnation.78 There is no explicit statement of a priori approval or of enthusiastic endorsement. Rajaks comments with regard to Bet Shearim are appropriate for our purposes: There is no reason to think that rabbinic authorities or any powerful groups within rabbinic society were anywhere near controlling the site, in terms either of practice or of economics. The remarkable evolution of EretzIsraels leading cemetery was a visibly independent process. It is tempting, indeed, to view the rabbinic role at Beth Shearim as a sort of physical correlative of the rabbinic role in Jewish society: the rabbis had to t in while others called the tune. 79
turies on the one hand, and the archaeological material, which is heavily concentrated in the third to seventh centuries on the other, there yet remains an overlap in the third and fourth centuries. Amoraic material focuses on this period and there are several very important archaeological remains that are dated to this erathe Bet Shearim cemetery and the ammat Tiberias synagoguea situation that aords an opportunity for the comparison of contemporary rabbinic attitudes and archaeological remains. 78. An example of the contrast between Patriarchal accommodation and rabbinic zeal is reected in the above-mentioned account of R. Judah Nesiah II, who received a traditional gift of coins from a high-ranking Roman ocial on the latters holiday. See above, note 56. 79. T. Rajak, Rabbinic Dead, 36465. For a dierent understanding of the relationship between the sages and the synagogue, see Miller, Rabbis and the Non-Existent Monolithic Synagogue, 5770.
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avoid the synagogue, preferring instead either the intimacy of their homes or the familiarity of the academy.87 The nature and extent of rabbinic contact with the synagogue in Late Antiquity were not uniform. Some rabbis appear to have been regularly involved in synagogue aairs, others not. This variety of relationships with the synagogue is, of course, understandable, given the diversity of rabbinic opinion with respect to a plethora of synagogue-related (as well as other) subjects.88 What is clearly evident from rabbinic sources, however, is a marked increase in rabbinic involvement in synagogue aairs from the mid third century on. Earlier, in the second century, rabbinic ties to the synagogue are rarely mentioned. One well-known tradition speaks of R. Meir teaching in a synagogue at ammat Tiberias on Friday evenings. A woman who came regularly to hear his sermons incurred the wrath of her husband, since her attendance meant that Sabbath meals were not prepared on time.89 Even if this report is historical (although the story appears only in the Yerushalmi, which was redacted several centuries after R. Meir lived), it virtually stands alone in attributing an active synagogue role to a second-century sage.90 The only other source which might be invoked in this regard is found in the fth- to sixth-century midrashic compilations. Both Leviticus Rabbah and Pesiqta de-Rav Kahana refer to R. Elazar b. R. Simeon, teacher of Bible and Oral Law, reciter of dierent types of poetry (/ 19,), and expounder of Scriptures. If this report is accurate, and not simply a retrojection from the Byzantine period, R. Elazar may have functioned in the above capacities in the synagogue, although a bet midrash setting nevertheless remains a possibility. The limited contact between the sages and the synagogue in the second century seems to be reected in the Mishnah as well, which mentions the institution on only twelve occasions, often with regard to issues that have no particular relevance to the sages.92 Moreover, each of the tannaitic midrashim (Mekhilta, Sifra, and Sifre) mentions the synagogue
87. See above, notes 5152. 88. See L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 8397. 89. Y Sotah 1, 4, 16d. Cf., however, Leviticus Rabbah 7:11 (pp. 19192) and Deuteronomy Rabbah 5, 15, which either do not mention where this happened or refer to the bet midrash instead of the synagogue. 90. R. Meir is also said to have preached in a Tiberian academy on the Sabbath (Y agigah 2, 1, 77b). According to R. Yoanan, his public discourses were usually divided into three parts: halakhah, aggadah, and parables. 91. Leviticus Rabbah 30, 1 (p. 690); PRK 27, 1 (pp. 4034); and Song of Songs Rabbah 3, 5 and 7 omit the word .See also PRK 28 (Buber, p. 179a n. 23); and Lieberman, Hazzanut Yannai, 223. See J. N. Epstein (Introduction to the Mishnaic Text, 688), who interprets to mean a public reciter ( ) of oral tradition. 92. See, for example, M Nedarim 5, 5. For additional references, see Kasovsky, Thesaurus Mishnae, s.v. bet knesset.
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only once.93 Even when discussing prayer, these sources do so in general terms, with only rare references to a synagogue setting (see Chap. 16). One conclusion from the evidence at handdespite the fact that we are primarily invoking an argumentum ex silentio and dealing with largely halakhically oriented tannaitic sourcesis that this dearth of information may be far from coincidental and indeed reects the historical reality of the times. It would appear that there was a minimal involvement of the sages in the workings of the second-century Palestinian synagogue. In contrast, from the mid third to fourth centuries, the number of sources attesting to rabbinic activity within the context of the synagogue increases dramatically.94 The thirdcentury Tosefta specically mentions the synagogue in twenty-ve instances, although it discusses synagogue matters on many other occasions as well. The Yerushalmi and later aggadic midrashim are innitely richer in such material than earlier tannaitic sources.95 However, despite this increase in source material and the documentation of increased rabbinic involvement, it should be noted that some aspects of synagogue involvement appear only sporadically, while the focus is often on particular sages. There seem to have been three major areas of rabbinic involvement in the ancient synagogue. The rst is preaching, and several sages are singled out in this regard. Most notable is the third-century amora R. Yoanan, who appears to have preached regularly in the synagogue of Sepphoris: R. Yoanan was sitting and expounding in the great synagogue of Sepphoris . . . a seafaring min [one who deviated from rabbinic norms] spoke up. 96 Most telling of all is a Yerushalmi account attesting to R. Yoanans popularity as a preacher (albeit in an academy setting): R. anania was leaning on R. iyya bar Ba in Sepphoris and saw all the people running. He said to him: Why are these [people] running? He said: R. Yoanan is preaching in the academy of R. Benaya and the people are
93. Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Yitro, 11 (p. 243); Sifra, Vayiqra, 11, 8, 6 (ed. Weiss, p. 22b); SifreDeuteronomy 306 (p. 342). 94. This increased involvement of sages is evidenced not only by the greater number of attestations in this respect, but also by the wide variety of areas that their activity encompassed. The greater number of sources include those directly mentioning a rabbi functioning in a synagogue setting, as well as those noting rabbinic involvement in an activity that undoubtedly took place there (even though a synagogue is not explicitly mentioned). This last category would include, for example, rabbinic contact with teachers, schoolchildren, prayer leaders, and meturgemanim. Moreover, as noted above, only for this period do we read of instances in which sages utilized synagogue premises for rabbinic activities and not only for communal ones (e.g., a Sabbath sermon). 95. See the various Kasovsky concordances, the Bar-Ilan Responsa Project, or Davka. 96. PRK 18, 5 (pp. 29798). On the presence of a min in the synagogue and the nature of his exchange with R. Yoanan, see the comments in Urbach, Heavenly and Earthly Jerusalem, 170; Kimelman, R. Yohanan of Tiberias, 175. and esp. 18788. On the term seafaring ( prs), see Lieberman, TK, I, 54 n. 84.
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running to hear him. He said: Blessed be the Merciful one Who has shown me the fruits [of my labor] while I am still alive. 97 R. Yoanans student R. Abbahu, likewise a noted preacher, often spoke at the Maradata synagogue in Caesarea and elsewhere.98 Another Caesarean, R. Isaac b. R. Elazar, functioned in a judiciary capacity in this same synagogue and, as noted above, was compared on one occasion to God in His holy sanctuary (Hab. 2:20).99 R. Samuel b. R. Naman preached in the Tarsian synagogue (alternatively, Synagogue of the Weavers [or Coppersmiths]) in Lod.100 On one occasion in the fourth century, R. Jeremiah expounded the Scriptures () in the Tiberian Synagogue of the Boule while, at the same time, R. Aa did so in the academy.101 This account is reminiscent of the well-known story regarding R. Abbahu and R. iyya b. Abba. Upon arriving in a certain town, the latter spoke on halakhah while the former focused on aggadah. People ocked to hear R. Abbahu, leaving R. iyya with practically no audience and bruised feelings. R. Abbahu subsequently sought to console his colleague by according him the respect due to a great teacher.102 Although not specically indicated, the settings of their talks may well have been the bet midrash and the synagogue, R. iyya in the former and R. Abbahu in the latter. A striking conrmation of the success of many Jewish preachers (talmudic sages?) in public forums comes from Jerome, who has the following to say about peoples reaction: They say one to another: Come let us listen to this or that rabbi who expounds the divine law with such marvelous eloquence. Then they applaud and make a noise and gesticulate with their hands. 103 A second aspect of rabbinic activity within the synagogue involved adjudication of halakhic matters. On one level, rabbis were asked to make decisions in various areas of law, but whether this was done in some sort of ocial capacity is unclear. So, for example, R. Yoanan was questioned on halakhic issues in the synagogue of Maon near Tiberias and in a Caesarean synagogue.104 On another level, sages served in courts that convened in synagogues, as was the case with R. Abbahu in the Maradata synagogue of Caesarea.105 A third area of rabbinic involvement concerned the education of the young. We have
97. Y Horayot 3, 7, 48b. See also Y Bava Metzia 2, 13, 8d; as well as Hirshman, Preacher and His Public, 112; Hezser, Form, Function, and Historical Signicance, 8388. 98. See, for example, Y Nazir 7, 2, 56a; Pesiqta Rabbati, Appendix 2 (p. 196b). 99. See note 86. 100. Leviticus Rabbah 35, 12 (pp. 83031). 101. Y Taanit 1, 2, 64a. 102. B Sotah 40a. 103. Jerome, In Ezek. 33, 33, per S. Krauss, Jews in the Works of the Church Fathers, part 2, 234. 104. Maon: B Bava Qama 99b; B Yevamot 64b; B ullin 97a. Caesarea: B Yevamot 65b. 105. Y Sanhedrin 1, 1, 18a, and elsewhere.
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already noted that elementary school education took place primarily, if not exclusively, in the synagogue. Rabbinic involvement in this area was twofold. On the one hand, sages such as R. Yoanan, R. Ami, and R. Samuel b. R. Isaac issued directives to teachers;106 these teachers, in turn, would often consult them on various matters, as was the case with R. Jeremiah, R. Isaac, and R. Mana.107 On the other hand, R. Abbahu once attempted to discreetly convey a message to a teacher through his own personal example.108 The clearest statement of rabbinic involvement in the education of the young, which presumably took place in synagogues, comes from the later third century: R. Judah Nesiah II dispatched three sages, R. iyya, R. Asi, and R. Ami, to oversee the teachers of Scriptures and teachers of Oral Law. 109 Two important points ought to be highlighted with regard to this tradition. First of all, sages were at times involved in the educational activities of Jewish communities, at least throughout Roman Palestine. Secondly, sages who functioned in this capacity, according to the above pericope, served under the auspices of the Patriarch as his representatives and emissaries, and not independently. Educational and religious functions of a synagogue were at times lled by sages or those close to them, as indicated in the following two third-century accounts. Around the turn of the third century, the inhabitants of Simonias solicited the help of R. Judah I in nding someone to serve their community as a preacher, judge, azzan, teacher of Bible and Oral Law, and one who would attend to all our needs, whereupon R. Judah recommended his student, Levi b. Sisi.110 On another occasion, from the mid third century, Resh Laqish recommended a Babylonian (sage?) when approached by the people of Bostra for someone to ll a similar position.111 Besides the above three areas, third-century sages were consulted on various synagogue-related issues. The residents of Migdal sought the advice of Resh Laqish regarding re-using the stones of a synagogue from one city in order to build a synagogue in another, and a generation later the Jews of Bet Shean asked R. Ami about re-using stones of a one synagogue in another within the same town.112 In the mid fourth century, the inhabitants of Sennabris queried R. Yonah and R. Yose about using a defective Torah scroll that may have been damaged during the Gallus Revolt.113
106. Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a; Midrash on Psalms 91, 3 (pp. 199ab). 107. Y Megillah 3, 6, 74b. 108. Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a. According to York, the ( safra) was (primarily?) in charge of Torah reading and also served as meturgeman; see his Targum in the Synagogue and the School, 7486. 109. Y agigah 1, 7, 76c. See the full text and other references listed in Chap. 10, note 115. See also L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 15962. 110. Y Yevamot 12, 7, 13a. 111. Y Sheviit 6, 1, 36d; Deuteronomy Rabbah, Vetanan (pp. 6061). 112. Y Megillah 3, 1, 73d. 113. Y Megillah 3, 1, 74a. On the debate surrounding the eects of the Gallus Revolt, see Avi-Yonah,
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Interestingly, a number of Babylonian accounts point to situations in which local rabbis actually built a synagogue, owned such property, or were a dominating presence there.114 Rabina owned an unused synagogue and wanted to tear it down and plant a eld, while Rami bar Abba wanted to build a new synagogue from the wood and bricks taken from a torn-down one. Rav Ashi claimed he had the right to sell a particular synagogue since it was only because of him that it was so well known. From Palestine, we have the intriguingand enigmaticstatement of R. Berekhiah (quoting the third-century R. Joshua b. Levi), uttered when he was taken aback by ordinary people washing their hands and feet in a basin of a synagogue courtyard in Bet Shean. His response was: Synagogues and academies belong to the sages and their disciples! 115
Jews of Palestine, 17684; Lieberman, Palestine in the Third and Fourth Centuries, 33541 (= Texts and Studies, 11824); Geiger, Gallus Revolt, 2028; Schfer, Aufstand gegen Gallus, 184201. 114. B Megillah 26b. 115. Y Megillah 3, 4, 74a. 116. The ensuing section presages to some extent the discussion in Chap. 16. Here, however, the focus is on rabbinic involvement in synagogue liturgy. 117. Bonl, Rabbis and Jewish Communities, 100102. 118. For a full picture of rabbinic impact on the synagogue, the following discussion should be read in conjunction with that relating to synagogue liturgy (below, Chap. 16). An attempt has been made to eliminate unnecessary repetition; nevertheless, given the close interrelation of these two topics, some overlap is unavoidable.
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fore there was ever an issue of rabbinic inuence.119 As we have seen above, these elements were the main components of Jewish liturgy in the Diaspora as well, and there, too, Pharisaic-rabbinic inuence was, at best, negligible. Therefore, how much the rabbis inuenced this part of the service in Late Antiquity is dicult to gauge. True enough, we have rabbinic discussions about which Torah portions should be read on holidays and special Sabbaths,120 but it is unclear whether the rabbis were merely choosing between several current practices, or whether they were in the process of actually creating a new sequence of readings. The very fact that there were a number of traditions for the reading of the Torah and haftarah in Roman-Byzantine Palestine 121 seems to argue against any type of overall control from a religious elite such as the sages, unless, of course, we were to assume as is entirely possiblethat this group itself was divided in its opinion. But about this, we have no information. We do have one interesting tradition that indicates a rabbinic desire to gain a conspicuous role in the public Torah-reading ceremony. In this instance, a group referred to as Galileans turned to R. elbo, who then referred the question to R. Isaac Nappa, regarding the proper order in which to call people to the Torah following the Cohen and Levi: After them we call [to the Torah] sages who are parnasim; after them, sages worthy of being parnasim; after them, sages whose ancestors were parnasim; and after them, heads of the synagogue and anyone else. 122 Who precisely these Galileans were is dicult to say. Perhaps they hailed from the non-urban areas of the Galilee; maybe they were similar to those whom Josephus refers to as Galileans.123 In any case, this source is quite self-serving, as it grants the sages a distinct preference in this realm. It is thus dicult to know how acceptable such a prioritization was in the community at large or what was, in fact, practiced. Rabbinic inuence in the area of targum is likewise unclear. The Yerushalmi relates a series of instances, noted above, in which R. Samuel b. R. Isaac tried to correct the practices of a meturgeman: One should not lean against a column when translating, the same person should not read from the Torah and then translate, and one should not read the targum from a book.124 Very little can be concluded from these episodes regarding rabbinic inuence. Clearly, these practices were out of consonance with rabbinic (or, at least, with R. Samuels) wishes, but we have no evidence whether the criticism was heeded. Moreover, we have already had occasion to note one striking instance in which a rabbinic practice was opposed by the local community; this concerned R. Simeon of Tarbanat,
119. See above, Chaps. 5 and 16. 120. M Megillah 3:46; T Megillah 3, 19 (pp. 35355); Y Megillah 3, 58, 74ac; B Megillah 29a32a. 121. Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 13233, and below, Chap. 16. 122. B Gittin 59b60a. 123. See Freyne, Galilee, 24145; idem, Galilee, Jesus and the Gospels, 21318; Oppenheimer, Am HaAretz, 20118. 124. Y Megillah 4, 1, 74d. See York, Targum in the Synagogue and the School, 7578.
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who was red by the community.125 Finally, we have taken note of the targumic tradition (Pseudo-Jonathan) of Lev. 26:1, which varies considerably from rabbinic attitudes toward gural art. Rabbinic literature preserves numerous examples of rabbinic sermons, but how representative they are of what actually transpired in synagogues is dicult to say. Did rabbis always, sometimes, or only rarely sermonize publicly? The homilies, although not inconsequential in number, do not oer adequate evidence regarding these issues.126 While the impact of the rabbis on the prayer dimension of the ordinary synagogue is likewise dicult to assess, it is nevertheless clear that sages took a great interest in this component of the worship service throughout Late Antiquity. As will be argued below,127 prayer as a daily religious obligation for every Jew was rst formulated by the Yavnean sages, and subsequent generations of sages never ceased to emphasize the obligatory nature of this format. But of more importance to our present discussion are not rabbinic comments on this or that aspect of prayer, but their actual participation in what was happening in the synagogue service itself. A number of accounts in the Talmud do, indeed, reect rabbinic involvement in the prayers and even in the prayer settings of the synagogue. Two sources are of particular consequence regarding the sages and synagogue prayers in the third century, as well as the place of rabbis and their particular prayer forms in the synagogue setting:128
R. Hiyya bar Abba said: R. Yohanan directed [ ]those in the synagogue of Kafra [a suburb of Tiberias] to enter [the synagogue] while it is still daytime [on the thirtieth of the month] so that [the proper prayers] may be recited at their proper time [and they will apply to the next day, if the month is extended]. R. Yoanan and R. Yonatan went to make peace [context unknown] in the towns in the south (of Palestine), and they came to a place where they found the azzan chanting: The great, strong, awesome, mighty, and courageous God. They silenced him and said to him: You have no right to add to the [prayer] formulas that the sages have coined. 129
The rst source indicates that R. Yoanan was able to be quite direct in telling the people of the Kafra synagogue what they should be doing on Rosh odesh. However, it might be claimed that, given his prominent position within Patriarchal and rabbinic circles, and given the fact that he himself was a resident of Tiberias, Yoanans inuence
125. Y Megillah 4, 5, 75b. 126. Heinemann, Public Sermons, 728; and below, Chap. 16. It is interesting to point out in this regard that books of aggadah, to which some sages were opposed, circulated among the Jews and in the synagogues as well; see Y Shabbat 16, 1, 15c. 127. See below, Chap. 16. 128. Y Taanit 4, 5, 68b; Y Rosh Hashanah 4, 4, 59c, following the commentary of Qorban Ha-edah. The Pnei Moshe interprets this as referring to prayers said at the New Moon meal. 129. Y Berakhot 9, 1, 12d.
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on the local community may not be all that surprising. The second account, therefore, is perhaps much more revealing for our purposes, for a number of reasons: (1) the alleged incident took place in the south, far from R. Yoanans (though not R. Yonatans) home community; (2) the rabbis here simply silenced the azzan, who was being particularly eusive and expansive in reciting the Amidah; (3) they claimed rabbinic prerogative in dening the proper prayer formulas to be used in synagogues; and (4) in this place, at least, the basic rabbinic formula for the Amidah was known (or at least these two sages presumed so), although the local azzan felt free to improvise on and supplement it. Thus, we can only conclude that the rabbinic prohibition against such additions was either unknown or disregarded. Here, then, is the earliest evidence we have of a specic synagogue setting in which rabbinic formulas were assumed to have been known and accepted, and where sages attempted to impose these norms when confronted by a deviation from them; all this clearly assumes that they had some sort of authority in such matters.130 Rabbinic involvement in the prayer setting is mentioned elsewhere as well. On one occasion, another third-century sage saw t to remove a prayer leader who bowed for too long a time.131 Several incidents are likewise known from the fourth century. R. Yose instructed bar Ulla, the azzan of the synagogue of Babylonians, as to the proper practice for reading from one or two Torah scrolls when two separate scriptural readings were required.132 Similarly, R. Abun was consulted regarding the proper procedure when a prayer leader named Batit(ay) suddenly stopped in the middle of the Qedushah and a replacement had to be found for him.133 Here, we are faced with a basic methodological conundrum. If the above few incidents represent all (or almost all) of the rabbinic involvement that ever took place in the third- and fourth-century synagogue liturgy, then we can safely say that their presence was indeed negligible. If, however, these instances represented only a tiny fraction of what ostensibly took place on a regular basis, we may then conclude that the sages indeed played a signicant role in the synagogues liturgical life. The situation might have been (and probably was) something in between. Unfortunately, we have no way of making any sort of determination owing to the paucity of available evidence. One area in which rabbinic involvement is quite well documented involves the public fast. With only sparse evidence from the second century and a plethora of material from the third and fourth, Late Antiquity witnessed active rabbinic involvement in this par130. One might claim that the fact that these sages were sent on such a mission to these communities is an indication that the communities were predisposed to accept their authority. This is undoubtedly true, and such an assumption in itself would argue for rabbinic standing and inuence in somewhat distant communities. 131. Y Berakhot 1, 5, 3d. See Ginzberg, Commentary, I, 89. 132. Y Yoma 7, 1, 44b; Y Megillah 4, 5, 75b; Y Sotah 7, 6, 22a; Tractate Soferim 11, 3 (p. 220). 133. Y Berakhot 5, 3, 9c.
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ticular ceremony that was acknowledged by the community at large.134 Sages are reported to have ordained fast days, oered prayers, and composed fast-day sermons calling for repentance and introspection. The tannaitic period has preserved such traditions regarding Shmuel Haqatan, R. Eliezer b. Hyrcanus, R. Aqiva, R. Halafta, and R. Hanania b. Teradion.135 Later on, in the amoraic era, we have a series of traditions from almost every generation, attesting to the similar involvement of sages who took the lead in pronouncing fast-day ceremonies or oering prayers for the occasion. Babylonian sages include Rav, Samuel, R. Huna, R. Judah, R. Naman, Rabba, Rava, and R. Pappa.136 It is reported that on one occasion, the last-named sage called a fast upon arriving at the synagogue of Be Govar.137 Palestinian sages from this period include the Patriarch on a number of occasions, specically Rabbi Judah II, as well as R. anina bar ama, R. Joshua b. Levi, R. Judah b. Pazi, R. iyya, R. Aa, R. Yose, and R. Berekhiah.138 On one occasion, we are told that a local community approached R. Tanuma, requesting him to ordain a fast.139 In general, the communal setting is very much at the forefront of the Yerushalmis public fast accounts; the sages often chose ordinary people to lead in the fast-day prayers, such as an ass driver or one who did menial work in a Caesarean theater. Moreover, communities could be rather critical of sages who did not produce the desired results.140 A number of studies have demonstrated how later rabbinic tradition developed earlier accounts of rainmakers, particularly of oni the Circlemaker, recasting them as rabbinic prototypes.141 This dimension is absent from the Bavli, maybe owing to its generally more focused attention on the rabbinic class and the latters more limited role in communal affairs.142
134. Earlier, in the pre-70 period, others in Jewish society may have taken the lead in such ceremonies, such as one Ananias of Tiberias (Josephus, Life 290) or Jerusalem elders (M Taanit 3, 6). See also D. Levine, Communal Fasts, passim. 135. B Taanit 25b; Y Taanit 3, 4, 66cd. See also T Taanit 1, 13 (p. 328). 136. B Taanit 8b, 24a25b; and D. Levine, Communal Fasts, 14566. 137. B Taanit 26a. See Oppenheimer, Babylonia Judaica, 6870. 138. Y Taanit 2, 1, 65ab; 3, 4, 66cd; Genesis Rabbah 31, 19 (p. 287); B Taanit 23a25b; and D. Levine, Communal Fasts, 12044. 139. Genesis Rabbah 33, 3 (p. 304); Leviticus Rabbah 34, 14 (pp. 8067). See also Lapins interesting analysis of a number of the above traditions (Rabbis and Public Prayers, 10529). 140. Y Taanit 1, 4, 64b; and Lieberman, Greek in Jewish Palestine, 3033. The more rabbinically focused discussions of fast-day ceremonies are described in the Bavli, which attributes the success of various Babylonian sages in bringing rain to the dierent agendas of each generation of sages (B Taanit 24ab). In commenting on the mishnaic statement that in the rst stages of a new dry spell individuals () should fast (M Taanit 1, 4), the Yerushalmi (Y Taanit 1, 4, 64b) identies these people as communal parnasim, while the Bavli (B Taanit 10a) claims the word refers to sages. My thanks to D. Levine for calling my attention to the above distinctions. 141. See, for example, Green, Palestinian Holy Men, 61947. 142. See D. Levine, Communal Fasts, 16366; Kalmin, Sage in Jewish Society, 114.
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To conclude this discussion of the sages and the prayer setting, it becomes clear, even with all the ambiguities inherent in the talmudic material, that by the sixth to eighth centuries, rabbinic inuence on the prayer liturgy seems to have been well on the way to becoming accepted practice. One primary source in this regard is Tractate Soferim, which outlines synagogue liturgical procedures. If this tractate indeed reects the practices of most (many?) contemporary synagogues, then we may conclude that not only had the ritual itself crystallized by this time, but the sages are often cited as authorities in such matters. Many pericopae specically note the directives of both individual rabbis and the sages in general regarding proper procedure. But the basic question still remains: How representative is Tractate Soferim of the practices of Jewish communities at large? 143 Rabbinic inuence on the piyyut, rst introduced in the Byzantine period, is clearer. These liturgical compositions were created to correlate with the prayers as we know them from rabbinic literature, particularly the Amidah. The piyyut for the weekday Amidah assumes eighteen benedictions; for Shabbat and holidays, seven. Those piyyutim that incorporate the Shema also include accompanying benedictions, two before and one (in the morning) or two (in the evening) afterward, per rabbinic prescriptions. The geulah prayer before the Amidah, as reected in piyyutim, also contained the verses from Exodus 15 and was integral to the daily prayers prescribed in rabbinic literature.144 Now it may be argued that perhaps only those piyyutim that conformed with rabbinic liturgy survived into the Middle Ages, while others were abandoned at one stage or another. At this moment, however, such an assumption appears to be unwarranted; there simply are no known piyyutim that reect an alternative liturgical format. Thus, despite the sometimes ambiguous evidence reviewed above, there seems to be enough material to indicate a growingif not dominant or signicantamount of rabbinic inuence on synagogue worship by the very end of antiquity. This inuence diered from one liturgical form to another and undoubtedly from one geographical location to another, but we can detect an expanded rabbinic involvement in, and inuence on, many phases of liturgical worship in Palestine and probably Babylonia. What may have been only partial and sporadic in the second and early third centuries evolved and expanded in the course of Late Antiquity.
CONCLUDING REMARKS
In attempting to dene the nature and degree of rabbinic involvement in the ancient synagogue generally, it has become clear that the rabbis did not control this institution. Nevertheless, we have noted that their involvement in synagogue aairs increased during the third and fourth centuries in a number of liturgical areas, and several factors appear to have been at play here. On the most immediate level, this trend may have been
143. See below, Chap. 16.
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linked in some way to the gure of the most outstanding Palestinian amora, R. Yoanan (died ca. 280), who is prominently mentioned in almost every area of rabbinic activity in synagogue life. A wider perspective, however, would view rabbinic participation in the synagogue as part of the sages increasing involvement in Jewish communal institutions generally from the early third century on. As noted elsewhere, under Rabbi Judah I the rabbinic class began to undergo a transformation from a relatively isolated elite centered in Judaean and Galilean villages to one based in the major Galilean cities and much more active in the Jewish community at large.145 It is also possible that increased rabbinic involvement was connected to the gradual transformation of the synagogue in the rst centuries c.e. from a multipurpose communal institution into one with a more prominent religious prole, as has already been discussed.146 This transformation was in all likelihood part of an overall pattern well known in Late Antiquity, i.e., the concern for the holy (be it a person, place, or object) and its impact on daily life.147 Moreover, the existence of Christian communities in third-century Palestine and their rapid expansion from the fourth century on, with bishops and other religious gures playing a prominent role in this process, would not have gone unnoticed by Jews. These developments may have aected rabbinic attitudes regarding the synagogue as well as the communitys increased receptivity to and acceptance of the sages, who were regarded more and more as sources of religious authority. Nevertheless, when all is said and done, the rabbis maintained a distinct religious and social identity that distinguished them from the surrounding society. Their way of life was essentially elitist; they adhered to unique patterns of behavior and had a deep commitment to learning and piety that could not be expected of the community at large.148 The chasm between elite and masses, the sophisticated and the superstitious, the learned and the ignorant, could be minimized or exacerbated, but it was always there. For many, disparagement or even scorn for those outside the elite was never far below the surface; Christian and pagan intellectual and religious elites shared the same prejudicesometimes more, sometimes less.149 The rabbis were most comfortable with their own kind, even though there was no dearth of tension even among themselves. The academy was their home; the synagogue was a place to frequent on occasion and in which to participate selectively.150
144. Fleischer, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 2340. 145. See L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 2342; S. J. D. Cohen, Place of the Rabbi, 15773; as well as below, Chap. 16. 146. See above, Chaps. 6 and 7. 147. Brown, Society and the Holy, 16365; idem, World of Late Antiquity, 4957. 148. L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 43133. 149. Brown, Art and Society, 23. 150. Of interest is the remarkable correlation of a rabbinic midrash with the En Gedi inscription. In both, two sets of names (Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; ananiah, Mishael, and Azariah) appear. The rab-
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Notwithstanding, with their communal religious involvement on the rise, some sages naturally began to help shape and mold the liturgical components of the synagogue. It appears that some (many?) of their discussions about prayer in the second to fourth centuries eventually found expression in one form or another in the synagogues of Palestine and Babylonia in Late Antiquity. Only when the sages gained undisputed ascendancy within the Jewish community in religious matters, a process that culminated under Muslim rule in the Middle Ages, did a distinct and normative rabbinic stamp on the synagogues religious dimension become irrevocably recognized.
binic sources describe these men as pillars of the world, a phrase that may explain their appearance in the inscription (Midrash on Psalms 1, 15 [p. 8a]).
fourteen
uch has been written of late about the role of women in ancient Jewish society. While the picture in this regard is not entirely negative, it is nevertheless clear that the womans place was conceived to be primarily domestic, and she was often depicted in rather disparaging and uncomplimentary terms. Josephus, for one, has remarked: The woman, says the Law, is in all things inferior to the man. Let her accordingly be submissive, not for her humiliation, but that she may be directed; for the authority has been given by God to the man. 1 A woman was to appear in public as little as possible, but when she did she was to cover her hair and minimize her conversation.2 In his Letter to the Corinthians, Paul demanded the silence of women in churches, and in II Timothy, written early in the second century, Paul wrote that women are silly . . . laden with sins, led away with diverse lusts, ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth. 3 Women were generally expected
1. Against Apion 2, 201.See also Josephus comment in his appraisal of Salome Alexandria: She was a woman who showed none of the weakness of her sex (Antiquities 14, 430). 2. Philo, Special Laws 3, 16974; M Ketubot 7, 6. 3. This idea, in I Cor. 14:34, was often reiterated by various church fathers, as, for instance, Cyril of Jerusalem (Procatechesis 14, cited in Slusser, Reading Silently, 499). Timothy (II Tim. 3:67), followed by Jerome several centuries later, traced in a derogatory fashion the female role in instances of heresy from the outset of Christianity up to his own day (Letter 33, 4). See also R. S. Kraemer, Her Share of the Blessings, 15773.
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to remain at home, and the public sector was largely closed to them.4 Such attitudes were not limited to a particular class, region, or era, but seem to have been the norm throughout antiquity. Nevertheless, there were exceptions. Some literary works feature remarkably positive depictions of female biblical gures and of women who were public leaders and benefactors. The Hasmonean Queen Salome, Queen Helena of Adiabene, and Bruria, wife of R. Meir, are striking examples of Jewish women who reached the pinnacles of political power, social recognition, or intellectual-religious achievement within Jewish society of Roman Palestine.5 However, such achievements by women were not the rule, neither among Jews nor in the surrounding Greco-Roman milieu.6 Marginality in the public sector, punctuated on occasion by the prominence of particular individuals, aptly describes the role and status of women in the ancient synagogue. Until recently, scholarly discussion of women in the ancient synagogue was limited. Only on rare occasion did scholars devote an article to one aspect or another of this issue (Lw, Friedmann, S. Safrai), while others wrote only several lines, paragraphs, or part of a chapter on the subject (e.g., S. Krauss, Schrer, Schechter, Elbogen, Rosenthal, and Zeitlin). In most instances, these authors discussed either women leaders or mixed seating.7 More recently, a spate of articles has addressed the issue of women and the synagogue, often within the framework of their role and status in Jewish life generally.8 We shall divide our discussion on women in the synagogue into the following ve topics: (1) synagogue attendance; (2) seating in the synagogue; (3) liturgical roles; (4) women as benefactors; and (5) women as synagogue ocials. The rst three categories relate to women in the context of the synagogue as a religious institution; the latter two discuss the political and social standing of women in the synagogue generally.
ATTENDANCE
A number of sources from the rst to seventh centuries c.e., and from Palestine as well as the Diaspora, indicate that women were regularly present in the synagogue during worship. Jesus encountered a woman while teaching in a Galilean synagogue, and Paul
4. Wegner, Image and Status, 6893; idem, Chattel or Person? 14567; T. Ilan, Jewish Women, 122 34. See also Hauptman, Women, 16069; MacMullen, Women in Public, 20818. 5. Van der Horst, Hellenism-Judaism-Christianity, 7395; Schrer, History, I, 22932; III, 16364. 6. T. Ilan, Womens Studies, 16873. 7. Articles or chapters: Lw, Synagogale Rituus, 36474; Friedmann, Mitwirkung von Frauen, 511 23; S. Safrai, In Times of Temple and Mishnah, I, 15968. Shorter references: S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 149, 356; Schrer, History, II, 43536; 44748; S. Schechter, Women in Temple and Synagogue, 317 20; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 35758; Zeitlin, Historical Study, 3058. 8. H. Safrai, Women and the Ancient Synagogue, 3949; R. S. Kraemer, Her Share of the Blessings, 11723; idem, Jewish Women in the Diaspora, 4849; T. Ilan, Window into the Public Realm, 56.
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often met women when visiting Diaspora synagogues: from there to Philippi, the rst of the cities of the Macedonian province, and it is an independent city, and we dwelt in the city for a number of days. And on the Sabbath we went out of the city to the banks of the river, where there was a place of prayer [ proseuche], as was their custom, and we sat there and we spoke to the women who were gathered there. 9 In Thessalonica and nearby Berea, the presence of women in synagogues is noted as well.10 Philo speaks of Therapeutae women and men who attended a sacred place () on the Sabbathin all probability a reference to their synagogue.11 The fact that pagan women in Damascus were especially attracted to Judaism, as noted by their husbands, seems to be an almost certain indication that they attended the synagogue regularly;12 otherwise, it would be hard to imagine how this attraction would have been eected, expressed, and maintained. A series of rabbinic traditions allegedly relating to the second century and later indicates that women regularly attended the synagogue. One source tells of a woman in Tiberias who attended the synagogue every Friday night to hear R. Meirs sermons.13 One tannaitic tradition speaks of a halakhic ruling allowing a non-Jewish woman to help prepare the meal while the Jewish woman of the household attended the synagogue.14 Another mentions the right of women and minors to be included among the seven people called to read from the Torah on the Sabbath; the obvious assumption here, at the very least, is that these people regularly attended the synagogue (see below).15 A late midrash tells of an elderly woman who, when consulting with the second-century R. Yose b. alafta, mentioned that she attended the synagogue every morning.16 Some rabbinic traditions purportedly concerning the third and fourth centuries likewise speak of the presence of women in synagogues. R. Yoanan is said to have asked a woman who prayed daily in his academy why she did not attend the synagogue in her neighborhood instead, assuming that this was the natural thing to do.17 Regarding the
9. Luke 13:1013; Acts 16:1213; and F. Manns, La femme et la synagogue, 15965. 10. Acts 17:14, 1012. 11. Contemplative Life 6682. In this regard, see R. S. Kraemer, Monastic Jewish Women, 34270. 12. Josephus, War 2, 560. On the growing religious piety of women in times of crisis in Late Antiquity, see Hunt, St. Stephen in Minorca, 112. 13. Y Sotah 1, 4, 16d; Leviticus Rabbah 9, 9 (pp. 19193); Numbers Rabbah 9, 20; Deuteronomy Rabbah 5, 15; Midrash Hagadol, Numbers 5:31 (p. 73). Interestingly, in the course of relating this incident, mention is made of other women who likewise attended the synagogue regularly. 14. B Avodah Zarah 38ab: A [Jewish] woman may set a pot on a stove, and have a gentile woman come and stir it until she returns from the bathhouse or synagogue, and she [the Jewish woman] has no reason to be concerned. This ruling, however, may be mitigated by the fact that MS Munich reads from the marketplace instead of from the synagogue, a reading conrmed by several other medieval authorities. 15. T Megillah 3, 11 (p. 356). 16. Yalqut Shimoni, Deuteronomy, 871; ibid., Proverbs, 943. 17. B Sotah 22a.
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question as to who should respond Amen in synagogues where all the men were priests and therefore recited the priestly blessing, it was decided that it should be answered by the women and children present.18 One Yerushalmi tradition discusses the issue of whether a woman could enter a synagogue in the company of someone with whom she was suspected of having sexual relations.19 Finally, Tractate Soferim speaks of women who regularly attended the synagogue on Tisha bAv:
If he [the reader of Lamentations] knows how to translate it, this is preferred, and if not, he gives it to someone who knows how to translate it well, and he translates so that the rest of the people [i.e., the men] and women and children will understand, for women, like men, are obligated to hear the reading of the book, and certainly males [are obligated] to do so. And they [i.e., women] are obligated to read the Shema and to recite the Prayer [i.e., the Amidah] and the grace after meals, and [are obligated to put] a mezuzah [on their home]. And if they do not know Hebrew, we teach them in any language so that they can hear and learn. And that is the reason it was said, He who recites the blessing must raise his voice for the benet of his sons, his wife, and his daughters. 20
The normal presence of women in synagogues is dramatically conrmed by a Christian source from the Diaspora. Toward the end of the fourth century, John Chrysostom claimed, among other things, that synagogues were places of abomination, the proof of which lay in the fact that men and women intermingled there.21 In his diatribe against the Jews, Chrysostom further remarked that some of the women in his church were judaizersundoubtedly an indication that they regularly attended the synagogue.22 Given the fact that women were a conspicuous presence in the Jerusalem Temple until the year 70 (to wit: the Womens Court), and considering the not inconsequential evidence cited above that they regularly attended synagogues, there can be no doubt that their presence in this setting was a recognized and widespread phenomenon throughout Late Antiquity.23
SEATING
Given the fact that women attended the synagogue regularly, the question arises as to where they sat. A generation or two ago, this would not have been an issue, as it was
18. Y Berakhot 5, 5, 9d. See also Ginzberg, Commentary, IV, 279; as well as B Sotah 38a. 19. Y Sotah 1, 2, 16c. 20. Tractate Soferim 18, 5 (pp. 31617). 21. Adv. Iud. 3, 1; 3, 2; 7, 4; and Wilken, John Chrysostom and the Jews, 12122. 22. Adv. Iud. 2, 3, 46. See also 4, 7, 3. Samaritan women also seem to have been included in worship frameworks. This is clear not only from the various Samaritan synagogues excavated to date that bear no evidence of any kind of a division or partition between men and women, but also from explicit statements relating to their sects that women attended services (Fossum, Sects and Movements, 347). 23. On women in the Temple, see S. Grossman, Women and the Jerusalem Temple, 1537; H. Safrai, Women and Processes of Change, 6376.
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universally assumed that the tradition reaching the modern era via the Middle Ages, i.e., that there was a separate section for women in all synagogues, reected accepted Jewish practice from time immemorial. That this, too, had been the case for antiquity is presumably borne out in Josephus War, which speaks of a strict division between the sexes in the Jerusalem Temple, noting that a special place for women to worship was walled o and had its own entrances.24 Philos description of the monastic Therapeutae in Alexandria might also be mobilized for this purpose; it appears that the men and women of this sect followed parallel but separate routines throughout the week, and when they congregated in their sanctuary on the Sabbath, they sat separately, with some sort of partition between them.25 This consensus was shaken in 1964, when S. Safrai argued that men and women did not sit apart in the ancient synagogue,26 basing his claim on two factors. The rst was the steady accumulation of archaeological evidence from both Palestine and the Diaspora dating from the rst seven centuries of the Common Era. From the farthest reaches of the Roman Empire and throughout Roman-Byzantine Palestine, no traces were found of a separate area that might be labeled a womens section; nor have any inscriptions noting such accommodations for women come to light. This absence is signicant in light of the fact that many synagogue inscriptions do, in fact, name various parts of the synagogue. True enough, some excavation reports continue to identify one room or another as a place reserved for women, but these identications are products of the excavators preconceptions and rest on no solid evidence whatsoever.27 The majority of these synagogue buildings had only a single prayer room or hall where the congregation gathered, and no trace of a balcony.28 Even when a building had a bal24. War 5, 19899. On the dating of Josephus report to the last decades of the Second Temple period, see L. Levine, Josephus Description, 24546. 25. Contemplative Life 3233, 69; R. S. Kraemer, Her Share of the Blessings, 11316. See also Richardson and Heuchan, Jewish Voluntary Associations, 23946, with some suggestions regarding origins. 26. Was There a Womens Section? 32938; reprinted in his collection of articles, In Times of Temple and Mishnah, I, 15968; followed by Brooten, Women Leaders, 10338; idem, Were Women and Men Segregated? 3339. 27. E.g., Bet Alpha (NEAEHL, I, 191), Khirbet Shema (E. M. Meyers et al., Ancient Synagogue Excavations at Khirbet Shema, 8081), and, with reservations, ammat Tiberias (Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, 24). This issue has been joined particularly with reference to Dura Europos and Room 7 there. In his ocial publication, Kraeling (Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 31) identied this room as a place for women. Goodenough ( Jewish Symbols, IX, 3037) oered another interpretation, that it served as a storeroom for sacred objects, foremost among which was the Torah scroll. More recently, other reservations to Kraelings suggestions have been voiced by Brooten (Women Leaders, 12628), while White (Building Gods House, 95) has generally followed Goodenoughs suggestion. See also the comments of S. Schechter, Women in Temple and Synagogue, 31718; Archer, Role of Women, 28182. 28. According to J. Rosenthal (Studies, II, 65256), there was no partition ( )in the ancient synagogue, but women nevertheless sat separately from men in the main hall. Such a separation between the sexes at festive meals is attested in a Genizah fragment from Late Antiquity (Lewin, Eretz Israel Maasim, 97).
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cony, indicated archaeologically by a stairway or by columns of dierent sizes, there is no reason to assume that it served as a womens gallery. Such areas might well have been used for meetings, court sessions, festive meals, study, or a place of residence for the azzan; according to rabbinic sources, the upper story of a synagogue was used for all these purposes.29 The second factor supporting Safrais argument for reevaluating the question of separate seating is the silence of the rabbinic sources regarding such an arrangement. As we have had occasion to note, this vast corpus addresses the synagogue in both halakhic and aggadic contexts. Nowhere in the four hundred or so pericopae dealing with the synagogue is mention made of a womens section, even though many other parts of a synagogue are indeed noted.30 The sources often quoted from Josephus and Philos writings, according to which Jews made a gender distinction in their public places of worship, e.g., the Temple and synagogue, are far from clear-cut. Josephus, in fact, contradicts himself on this very matter in both Against Apion and Antiquities. In the former, he species four dierent courtyards: the rst was open to all, including non-Jews; the second only to Jews, including women; the third to male Jews only; and the fourth to priests. In Antiquities, he notes an outer courtyard that both men and women entered, yet only men were permitted to proceed into the more sacred Court of the Israelites.31 Philos description of the Therapeutae relates to a group so unique in its religious behavior as to preclude any assumption that they reected normative Jewish practice at the time. In any case, the historical accuracy of his highly idealized account may be suspect. Rabbinic sources, on the other hand, attest to the fact that men and women were together in what is referred to as the Womens Court. In describing the preparations required for the Water-Drawing Festival (Simat Bet Hashoevah) on Sukkot, tannaitic literature describes the construction of a special balcony around the Womens Court to separate the sexes, built because of the frivolity accompanying these particular ceremonies.32 This very statement makes it eminently clear that on the other fty-one weeks
29. See above, Chap. 10. 30. See S. Safrai, In Times of Temple and Mishnah, I, 15968. It is sometimes claimed that Y Sukkah 5, 5, 55b, is an exception to this rule. This tradition states that Roman soldiers once killed the Jewish males in an Egyptian community while the women cried out, What you have done to those below, do to those above [i.e., to us], and has often been taken to reect the local synagogue setting, where the men were to be found in the main hall below and the women in the balcony above. However, there is no indication that a synagogue setting was intended, and the storys setting may have been a wall or tower to which the Jews had ed. Moreover, in a parallel version found in Lamentations Rabbah 1, 45, the women are reputed to have said just the opposite: Do to those below [i.e., to us] what you have done to those above. Therefore, this source cannot be used as proof of separate seating in the synagogue. 31. Against Apion 2, 1034; Antiquities 15, 41819. 32. M Middot 2, 5; T Sukkah 4, 1 (p. 272); B Sukkah 51b52a; Y Sukkah 5, 2, 55b. See S. Grossman, Women and the Jerusalem Temple, 2224; and, more generally, Rubenstein, History of Sukkot, 13145.
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of the year no such separation was in evidence. Furthermore, several rabbinic sources seem to indicate that women might have also entered the Israelites Court, which Josephus claimed was restricted to men only.33 When women brought sacrices, as, for example, after childbirth, as part of the sotah ceremony (when a woman was accused of being adulterous), at the conclusion of a period of Nazirite vows, or when bringing rstfruits, they, too, would enter the sacred precincts.34 Finally, one of the gates leading into the Temples inner courts, near the altar, was called the Womens Gate, quite possibly indicating that women used that portal to bring their sacrices. One striking example from Late Antiquity noting a woman sitting among men is found in an inscription from the synagogue of Phocaea, in Asia Minor. In response to Tations generous gift, the synagogue community accorded her several honors, including prohedria, sitting in the front row of the congregation.35 There is no reason to assume that this refers to the front row of a womens section or to some sort of non-liturgical gathering of the community. Thus, it appears that, in this community at least, it was an accepted practice for women to sit among men. On the basis of the above discussion, there can be little doubt that throughout Late Antiquity, Jews gathered in the synagogue for religious purposes without making any distinctions in seating arrangements between males and females.36
LITURGICAL ROLES
Granting the fact that women attended the synagogue, did they play an active role in the synagogue ritualin prayers, sermons, or Torah reading? Admittedly, evidence here is almost totally absent; given the womans generally inferior public status in antiquity,
33. Antiquities 15, 419; War 5, 19899. On this and other contradictions between Josephus and rabbinic literature regarding the Temple, and within the sources themselves, see my Josephus Description, 233 46. 34. See, for example, M Kritot 1, 7; M Qinim 1, 4 (and Maimonides commentary to the mishnah, loc. cit.); Sifra, Tazria, 4 (ed. Weiss, p. 59b); T Arakhin 2, 1 (p. 544); M Bikkurim 1, 5; and Maimonides, SacricesLaws of agigah 3, 2; as well as S. Safrai, In Times of Temple and Mishnah, I, 16162; S. Grossman, Women and the Jerusalem Temple, 2027; H. Safrai, Women and Processes of Change, 6376. 35. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 13; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 11011; Rajak, Jews as Benefactors, 31. For further comments on this inscription, see below. 36. On the evidence in this regard, see John Chrysostom, above, note 21. The earliest indication of a partition is found in sixth- or seventh-century Pirkei Mashia (Even-Shmuel, Midreshei Geulah, 341), where it is written that women bringing their children to study (presumably in a synagogue) would stand behind a partition of reeds that served as a fence ( .) On this source, see Fine, At the Threshold. See also Zeitlin, Studies, I, 5053. See the recent study of Mattila (Where Women Sat, 27683), who claims that there was separate seating in synagogues primarily on the basis of pagan and Christian parallels. Since there is no direct evidence for this from a Jewish context (see above), resorting to cross-cultural comparisons is problematic and leaves little room for ethnic, cultural, and religious diversity. See below.
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one would be hard pressed to make a case for womens having any kind of active leadership role or responsibility within the parameters of congregational worship in general. Only one source, found in the Tosefta,37 addresses this issue; unfortunately, it is both ambiguous and ambivalent:
[A] Everyone is included [ ] in the counting of seven [people to be called up to read from the Torah on the Sabbath], even a woman, even a child. [B] One does not bring [ ] a woman to read to the public [.] [C] If a synagogue has only one person who is able to read, he stands, reads, and sits; stands, reads, and sits; stands, reads, and sitseven seven times.
The apparent contradiction between (A) and (B) is clear. The pericope begins with what seems to be carte-blanche permission for a woman to read from the Torah (Everyone is included . . . even . . . even . . .). However, this allowance is immediately countered, by either a retraction (B) or a severe limitation (C). By interpreting these three halakhot as one unit, and therefore as integrally related, Lieberman assumes that the rst part of the Tosefta was never intended as a blanket endorsement of womens participation, but rather only as a reference to the Torah reading following the rst three aliyot. Following medieval rabbinic interpretation, he posits that the rst three aliyot were regarded in rabbinic literature as Mosaic in origin ( ) and were thus reserved for adult males. It follows that the rst part of the above source (A) allows a woman to be counted only among the remaining four aliyot ( .) The next statement (B) restricts a womans participation in the sense that she is not to be called upon to read in public when there are males present. Moreover, if there is only one male who knows how to read, he is to continue reading the entire Torah portion (C).38 In eect, then, according to Liebermans understanding, a woman was really never permitted to read. What was granted (A) was immediately revoked (B, C). If this was indeed the position taken by the author of this tradition, then the rst formulation (A) is rather surprising. Why say a woman can do something if, indeed, the intention is to disqualify her from doing so? In addition, the Tosefta speaks inclusively of all seven aliyot, and any distinction between the rst three and last four appears to be completely alien to its simple meaning. Moreover, this supposed attitude toward a woman certainly does not apply to a minor, who is mentioned in the same context; the Mishnah explicitly grants a minor permission to read the Torah and haftarah.39 In the case of a minor, it would be dicult to assume a contradiction between the Mishnah and the Tosefta, for surely one or both of the talmuds would have commented on it. Thus, to assume that the blanket statement of (A) granted permission to a minor but not to a woman is dicult to
37. T Megillah 3, 1112 (p. 356). 38. Lieberman, TK, V, 117677. 39. M Megillah 4, 6; and comments of Faur, Aliyah for a Minor, 12326.
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reconcile. Moreover, if Lieberman is correct in his interpretation of the Tosefta, i.e., that it is meant to exclude women, then why did the Bavli comment on this tradition by saying, But we do not act thusly because of the honor [or dignity] of the congregation? 40 Clearly, the Bavli thought that permission was being granted to women for some sort of participation, which it then proceeded to rescind. We may thus conclude that the Tosefta statement (A) was indeed intended to allow a woman to read, but that this permission gradually diminished, rst by restrictions made by the Tosefta itself, presumably later in the second or early third century (B, C), and then by the general prohibition laid down by the Bavli.41 It would seem, therefore, that these are three independent traditions that were arranged contiguously in the Tosefta but were originally separate and independent pericopae.42 The question thus remains as to whether the Tosefta statement (A) allowing women to participate actually reected second-century Palestine (and perhaps earlier) or was a purely theoretical statement. The second Tosefta pericope (B) also seems to indicate that at some point someone thought that a woman could be called to read; otherwise, a categorical statement denying this possibility would have been superuous. However, at this point we reach a dead end. In the absence of any additional evidence, literary or otherwise, there is no way of making a nal determination.43
BENEFACTORS
The evidence for philanthropic activity in antiquity is almost entirely epigraphical, as the purpose of most synagogue inscriptions was to record the names of donors and the contributions made toward the construction of a building or refurbishing it.44 Women donors are recorded throughout the Empire.45 This epigraphical evidence spans almost every century from the Hellenistic era down to the close of Late Antiquity, and while many inscriptions do not specify what was contributed, others spell out exactly what was
40. B Megillah 23a interprets this phrase as a Bavli addition, and not as part of the original tannaitic tradition (baraita). See Lieberman, TK, V, 1177; Golinkin, Aliyot for Women, 14; and H. Safrai, Women and the Ancient Synagogue, 4244. 41. Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 139; Golinkin, Aliyot for Women, 1319. On the attitude of the Mishnah toward women in the public sphere, see Wegner, Chattel or Person? 14567; with respect to earlier traditions preserved in the Tosefta that appear to have been more inclusive of women, see Hauptman, Womens Voluntary Performance, 16168. 42. The very dierent formulations of each pericope might also point to the fact that these were originally independent traditions. 43. See, however, the comments of S. and Ch. Safrai, All Are Invited to Read, 399401. 44. This and the following section rely heavily on the material gathered in Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs; Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic; Brooten, Women Leaders; and Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions. See also M. S. Collins, Money, Sex and Power, 722. 45. Brooten, Women Leaders, 15765. More generally, see van Bremen, Women and Wealth, 22342.
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given and by whom. A woman, either by herself or together with her spouse, may have made a donation for an entire building, wall decorations, mosaics, a portico, a chancel screen or supporting posts, or a basin for ablutions.46 Thus, of the eighteen members of the Berenice synagogue who contributed toward the repair of the building, many of whom were communal ocials, two were women Isadora, daughter of Serapeion, and Zosima, daughter of Terpolius.47 Elsewhere, in Naro, North Africa, Margarita, daughter of Riddeus, made a contribution together with Asterius, son of the archisynagogue Rusticus, who was no apparent relation.48 In a dozen cases equally divided between Asia Minor and Syria, women made contributions with their husbands; in only half of these cases is the wifes name mentioned.49 On one occasion, a brother and sister made a joint donation, and on another a father made a contribution with his daughter.50 Finally, an inscription from Apamea mentions a donation made on behalf of a wife ( ), and one from Egypt mentions a contribution made on behalf of a woman by an unidentied donor.51 Three rather unusual contributions from Asia Minor merit our attention.52 The rst, dating from the mid rst century c.e., has already been discussed, i.e., the contribution of a building to the Jewish community of Acmonia by the pagan Julia Severa.53 The second records the construction of an entire synagogue building together with an adjacent courtyard for the Jewish community of Phocaea by Tation, mentioned above, in the second or, more likely, third century c.e. The inscription in reads:
Tation, the daughter of Straton, son of Emphedon, built out of her own [money] the synagogue building [ ] and the colonnade of the courtyard, and gave them to the Jews. The community of Jews has honored Tation, daughter of Straton, son of Emphedon, with a gold crown and a front seat [in the synagogue].54
This inscription is remarkable not only for the generous gift of this apparently wealthy woman, but also for the very conspicuous acknowledgment she received. A gold crown was, of course, a common gift of recognition in the Roman world, and within the synagogue context such an acknowledgment is paralleled by a similar honor oered in Cy-
46. See Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 16, 20, 28, 29, 4143, 46, 48, 50, 53, 57, 96. 47. Ibid., no. 100. 48. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, II, 90; Brooten, Women Leaders, 164, no. 38. 49. Brooten, Women Leaders, 16163. 50. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 28 and 67. An inscription from Sepphoris also names a father and daughter as donors (see below). 51. Ibid., nos. 39, 56, 91. 52. See in this regard Rogers, Construction of Women at Ephesos, 21523. 53. See above, Chap. 4. 54. See above, note 35. See also G. H. R. Horsley, New Documents, I, 11112.
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rene.55 What is most unusual here is the prominent seat () accorded Tation in the synagogue, in a place usually reserved for the most honored patrons and elders.56 Finally, the third benefactor, one Capitolina, hailed from Tralles in Caria, Asia Minor:
I, Capitolina, worthy and a fearer of God [], have made the entire platform and the inlay of the stairs in fulllment of a vow to myself and my children and my grandchildren. Blessings.57
Of interest in this third-century inscription is not only the gift of a bima and the decoration for some stairs (whether the reference is to the stairs of the bima or somewhere else is unclear), but that, like Julia Severa, Capitolina hailed from a prominent local pagan family and was clearly of advanced years when she made this contribution. In contrast to Julia Severa, who remained pagan, and Tation, who was apparently Jewish,58 Capitolina seems to have involved herself in local synagogue aairs and identied with the community to the extent that she was referred to as a fearer of God. It is noteworthy that pagan women are mentioned in two of these inscriptions. This not only seems to reect the good relations between Jewish and pagan communities in Asia Minor in the rst centuries c.e.,59 but also provides concrete instances of one of the ways in which the Greco-Roman phenomenon of womens benefactions penetrated the consciousness and practice of local Jewish communities.
OFFICIALS
Women may have had some part in the leadership of the ancient synagogue. This topic has merited a great deal of scholarly attention recently, especially since the pio55. See above, Chap. 4. 56. A similar instance was noted with regard to a priestess of Athena, Chrysis of Delphi. In acknowledgment of her commendable execution of the oce, proxenia was accorded to her and to her descendants from the city, and the right to consult the oracle, priority of trial, safe conduct, freedom from taxes, and a front seat at all the contests held in the city (R. S. Kraemer, Maenads, no. 78). See also MacMullen, Roman Social Relations, 76. 57. Cf., however, Schrer, History, III, 167; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 15758; and Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, no. 30, for a dierent reading. 58. Opinions dier sharply as to whether Tation was Jewish. On the one hand, the phrases gave them to the Jews and the community of Jews has honored would seem to indicate that Tation was pagan. On the other hand, allotting her a front seat whenever the community assembled, which would basically be on Sabbaths and holidays, seems to indicate that she was Jewish. It would make little sense for a pagan to be accorded a front seat in a Jewish liturgical setting, unless, perhaps, she was a God-fearer. While certitude in the matter is impossible, the second alternative appears the most likely. See also White, Social Origins, 325 n. 69. 59. Kraabel, Diaspora Jews and Judaism, 23755; Sheppard, Jews, Christians and Heretics, 16980; van der Horst, Juden und Christen, 12543; Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 17385.
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neering study by Brooten.60 The available evidence appears to be quite clear: women are identied by the titles archisynagogos/archisynagogissa (Smyrna, Crete, Myndos), archegissa (Thessaly), presbytera (Crete, Thrace, Venosa [three times], Tripolitania, Rome, Malta), mater (Rome [three times], Venosa, Venetia), pateressa (Venosa), and priestess (Egypt, Rome, Jerusalem, Bet Shearim). To this we should add the single reference in rabbinic literature to a woman treasurer (gizbarit).61 What, in fact, do these terms mean? Were these essentially honoric titles (granted to the woman either on her own merit or by virtue of her being the wife of an ocial), or were they actual ocial positions? 62 Until the appearance of Brootens monograph, it had been generally assumed that these titles were honoric. Such an interpretation corresponded with the thrust of rabbinic legislation and comments at the time, which, as noted, seem to have accorded women minimal opportunities in the public sphere. Nevertheless, we have argued above that rabbinic literature is the product of a religious elite in Palestine and Babylonia, and the degree to which this elite inuenced or reected society in general, even in its immediate environs, is open to debate. Whatever the case, rabbinic inuence on Jewish communities with which the rabbis had littleif anycontact (as in the Roman Diaspora), is even less likely. Thus, the evidence from rabbinic sources is interesting but may be somewhat irrelevant to our discussion. Having questioned a common assumption of previous scholarship, Brooten succeeded in reopening the question of women synagogue ocials to review and reevaluation. However, she did not succeed in providing convincing proof that such ocial positions were indeed open to women and that these titles were therefore anything but honoric.63 Following the publication of Brootens book, Kraemer analyzed a previously published inscription from Malta that appears to provide compelling evidence in favor of Brootens theory.64 The inscription records the dierent titles for a man (gerousiarch) and for his wife (presbytera). It is thus quite clear that this latter title was not given to the woman owing to her husbands role, nor does it appear to have been an honorary designation. It
60. Brooten, Women Leaders; and idem, Female Leadership. See also R. S. Kraemer, New Inscription from Malta, 43138; idem, Her Share of the Blessings, 11727; S. J. D. Cohen, Women in the Synagogues, 2329; van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 1059; and comments in Rajak, Jewish Community, 2224. On Megiste, the priestess in Jerusalem, see T. Ilan, New Ossuary Inscriptions, 157. Cf., however, the reservations in Feldman, Diaspora Synagogues, 5658. On women functionaries in the early church, see, for example, Didascalia Apostolorum 3, 8, 9, 12 (pp. 13843, 14650); La Porte, Role of Women, 10932; Bradshaw, Liturgical Presidency, 20. 61. B Shabbat 62a. 62. See, for example, the dispute around the Marin (or Marion) inscription. Horbury and Noy ( Jewish Inscriptions, no. 84) interpret the term to mean of priestly family; Richardson and Heuchan (Jewish Voluntary Associations, 23439) interpret it to mean priestess, one who functioned within the temple of Leontopolis. 63. Note the reservations in Rajak, Jewish Community, 2223. 64. R. S. Kraemer, New Inscription from Malta, 43138.
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is dicult to make a cogent case that a title that we would automatically assume reects an actual communal oce with regard to a man would be honorary simply because it was now attached to a woman. The same holds true for a recently discovered inscription from southern Italy cited by Brooten that lists Myrina the elder (presbytera) along with her husband, Pedeneious, the scribe (grammateus).65 In sum, there is certainly a possibility that most, if not all, the titles that appear in over a score of Diaspora inscriptions are those of functioning women ocials. The challenge, however, is nding a way to substantiate this claim and not merely assert it (see below).
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Josephus Warsee above), would seem to tilt the balance in favor of mixed seating.66 On the other hand, any assumption that women sat in a room next to the main hall (as has been suggested for the synagogues in Gamla and Dura), or that a balcony was reserved for their use (as posited for Galilean buildings), is wholly gratuitous in light of the evidence, or lack thereof, in literary and archaeological sources. However, it is when we examine the other three areas noted above that we must exercise far more caution in making any sweeping generalizations, and in some of these cases chronological and geographical distinctions are called for. Regarding the liturgical involvement of women, we have noted the possibility that women were included in the Torah-reading ceremony, at least in some locales in rst- or second-century Palestine.67 In truth, this is not the only rabbinic source that alludes to a more active role of women at the time, whether theoretically or in practice. The tannaitic midrash SifreNumbers includes an opinion that women should be obligated to wear tzitziot (fringes on their garments), and the Bavli interprets several phrases in the Mishnah and the Tosefta (and also quotes the Palestinian amora R. Joshua b. Levi in this regard) as including women in the obligation to read the Megillah on Purim; this would thus put women in the rabbinic halakhic category of those who could read publicly (i.e., for others).68 However, even were we to pursue this line of reasoning and assume that there might have been some sort of participation of women in the rst centuries c.e., it is nevertheless clear that such a practice was, at best, very limited in scope. Not only are rabbinic sources silent regarding this phenomenon, but all references to liturgical titles in Late Antiquity, in both literary and epigraphical sources (e.g., azzan, sofer, super orans, psalmodos, sophodidaskalos), are associated with men; not one womans name is noted in this regard.69 In the last two areas mentioned above, women as benefactors and as synagogue ocials, some very clear geographical distinctions can be made. Regarding benefactors, let us look more closely at the following geographical regions: the Roman Diaspora, Palestine, and the East (Dura Europos). We know of over one hundred names of synagogue donors in the Roman Diaspora. Of these, approximately 29% were women.70 More often than not, the women are named, but on several occasions they are referred to merely as spouses.71 In Apamea, for example,
66. Cf., however, Mattila, Where Women Sat in Ancient Synagogues, 26686. 67. See above, note 43. 68. Tzitziot: SifreNumbers 115 (p. 124); see also B Menaot 43a. Megillah: B Arakhin 2b3a. See Hauptman, Womens Voluntary Performance, 16168. 69. See above, Chap. 11. 70. The percentages oered here and in what follows are only approximations. Some inscriptions are fragmentary and the readings uncertain, and in some cases it is not always clear whether the reference is to a man or a woman. In a few instances, the same name appears more than once, and it is not clear whether it refers to the same person. 71. Lifshitz, Donateurs et fondateurs, nos. 40 and 50.
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fourteen of the nineteen inscriptions discovered in the fourth-century synagogue building mention female donors, either alone (nine) or together with their husbands (ve). However, we nd a signicantly dierent picture in Palestine. The Greek inscriptions have preserved almost seventy names associated with some sort of contribution; only three of these (about 4%) mention women. These three inscriptions were found in two large cities in the southern coastal region, one in Gaza and two in Ashkelon, all dating to the Byzantine period.72 The Aramaic and Hebrew inscriptions in Palestine are remarkably similar to the Greek ones.73 Close to 125 names are noted as synagogue benefactors; of these, all but ve are males. One inscription mentions an anonymous female donor.74 Thus, six inscriptions, or about 5%, mention women benefactors. As with the Palestinian Greek inscriptions, the Aramaic and Hebrew ones are concentrated in several locations. Three womens names appear in the synagogue at the hot springs resort of ammat Gader, two in the synagogue at Naaran, and one in the synagogue at Sepphoris.75 To complete the spectrum of material in this regard, we must travel further east, to the Dura Europos synagogue, where there are some fty inscriptions in Greek, Aramaic, and Iranian. Four people are noted as having made contributions to the building. About a dozen other names appear as grati and were apparently recorded by visitors. All of the names are of men.76 In summary, then, there seem to have been three dierent patterns of womens participation as donors (assuming, of course, we are justied in viewing Dura as representative), each in a dierent region. Women are not at all represented as synagogue benefactors at Dura Europos, located in the far reaches of the Roman East and under Parthian control for centuries before the Roman conquest of the city in the mid second century c.e. Only a slightly dierent picture emerges from the Greek and Aramaic material from Palestine, where some 45% of the names refer to women donors. Finally, the most extensive involvement of women as synagogue benefactors was in the Roman Diaspora, where close to 30% of the names were women. The geographical factor is no less evident with respect to women synagogue ocials. Given the fact that there is a major concentration of evidence from Asia Minor and its
72. Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, nos. 2, 3, 23, and pp. 19091. 73. For a comparison of Greek and Semitic inscriptions generally from Roman-Byzantine Palestine, see Roth-Gerson, Greek Inscriptions, 14762. 74. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 34. Some, however, read here the name Entolia; see Navehs discussion on p. 61. 75. ammat Gader and Naaran: ibid., nos. 32 and 34. Sepphoris: Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption, 41. Not included here is an inscription from useifa as interpreted by Httenmeister and Reeg (Antiken Synagogen, I, 18384) and followed by Brooten (Women Leaders, 160, no. 18). The reading, however, was corrected in Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 39. 76. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 261317. See also Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 88 104.
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immediate surroundings, how can one explain this phenomenon? Is it purely a local one or does it point to a more widespread practice? We have noted above that the issue of women ocials cannot be satisfactorily resolved solely on the basis of the primary evidence. However, one possible approach would be to see if the larger social context could provide data to support the assumption that women did, in fact, hold communal oces. If we can verify that womens participation in religious institutions was an accepted practice in a given area, it would lend credence to the claim that Jewish women in that particular region likewise participated in synagogue aairs. We are best informed in this regard by comparative material from Asia Minor and the surrounding area. Since the submission of Kraabels doctoral thesis in 1968, and down to Trebilcos 1991 monograph, the extent to which pagan women generally played active roles in this region has become crystal clear.77 Trebilco notes ten women in six cities who held the title demiourgos, forty-eight in twenty-three cities who were called gymnasiarchs, twenty-eight in eight cities who received the title prytanis, thirty-seven in seventeen cities who held the title stephanephoros, eighteen women in fourteen cities who were called agonothete, and ve who were referred to as hipparchos. A few women were members of a gerousia, and others held the positions of panegyriarch, strategos, and dekaprotos.78 Trebilco also calls attention to an inscription from Phocaea that acknowledges one very accomplished woman: The Teuthadeos tribe, [to or for] Flavia Ammion, daughter of Moschos, who is called Aristios, chief-priestess of the Temple of Asia in Ephesus, prytanis, twice stephanephoros, priestess of the Massalia, agonothete, wife of Flavius Hermocrates, on account of excellence and propriety regarding conduct and purity. 79 Another inscription, from Aphrodisias, speaks of another accomplished woman:
The council and the people and the senate have granted rst honors to Tata, daughter of Diodoros, son of Diodoros [by adoption], son of Leon by birth; holy priestess of Hera for life; mother of the city; who became and remained wife of Attalos, son of Pytheas, stephanephoros; [who is] also herself of foremost and illustrious stock; who served as priestess of the emperors for the second time; who twice supplied oil most abundantly for small vessels running from the bathing tubs even for the greater part of the night; who [herself ] functioned as stephanephoros; who sacriced during the course of entire years for the health of the emperors; who sponsored feasts for the people which were both frequent and involved reclining dinners for the whole populace; who primarily on her own maintained the top performances in Asia in both musical and theatrical competitions and who oered to [her] native city for the neighboring towns to assemble together for the display of the performances and to cele77. See, for example, Brooten, Iael, 15662; R. S. Kraemer, Her Share of the Blessings, 11823; and, regarding the Montanist sect, ibid., 17778; and especially van Bremen, Limits of Participation, 14290. 78. Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 11326. See also MacMullen, Paganism, 146 n. 52; van Bremen, Women and Wealth, 22342. 79. Trebilco, Jewish Communities, 119.
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brate [the festival] together; who spared expenses on no ones wife; loving glory; adorned with virtue [and] prudence.80
Given these accolades, as well as the number of women who held titles and oces in this region, it is not dicult to assume that nearby Jewish communities might well have been aected. It appears that the concentration of synagogue-related titles for women in this part of the world was far from coincidental. Nevertheless, it is also important to bear in mind that this situation was not the norm for all communities of Late Antiquity. Focusing for a moment on the term archisynagogue, we note that women are mentioned in that role on four occasions, all of whom come from Crete and Asia Minor (Smyrna, Cappadocia, and Myndos).81 Altogether, the title archisynagogue appears in ancient inscriptions in connection with some forty people, which include eight from Palestine. Thus, women bearing this title in the Diaspora synagogue constitute about 10% of those mentioned.82 However, statistics from the catacombs of Rome would caution us against too facile a conclusion with regard to women oceholders. In inscriptions there, only ve women bear ocial titles, as compared to 117 men, i.e., only slightly over 4%.83 Here, as elsewhere, the local contextinternal and externalappears to have been decisive. The above discussion, especially with regard to the areas of benefactors and ocials, makes a patently clear case for the extent to which various Jewish communities were inuenced by the surrounding culture. Not only were women in the Roman Diaspora particularly active as benefactors, but, like their husbands, they chose to announce this fact via inscriptions, which in itself was a decidedly Roman practicewhat MacMullen refers to as the epigraphic habit. 84 External inuences are likewise evident with regard to women ocials; as we have seen, this phenomenon was most pronounced in the Jewish context precisely in those areas where it applied to pagan (and Christian, for that mattersee below) women as well. Moreover, it must be remembered that the presence of women ocials was indeed a departure from earlier Jewish practice. Except for certain charismatic biblical gures,
80. Brooten, Iael, 157. See also R. S. Kraemer, Maenads, no. 81; R. Gordon, Veil of Power, 228 30; Torjesen, When Women Were Priests, 89109. 81. Brooten, Female Leadership, 21516. 82. Whether the name Iael (or Jael), president or patron of a Jewish dekany in Aphrodisias, is that of a man or woman has been argued over the past decade. Certitude in the matter remains elusive, although a growing consensus tends toward the latter alternative. The identication as a womans name has been maintained in the revised edition of Schrer, History, III, 2526; Brooten, Iael, 15662; Rajak, Jews and Christians, 255; Williams, Jews and Godfearers, 300. Reynolds and Tannenbaum ( Jews and GodFearers, 41, 101) prefer to consider it a mans name; see also Mussies, Jewish Personal Names, 26169. 83. Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 135. Cf. also R. S. Kraemer, Non-Literary Evidence, 9091. 84. MacMullen, Epigraphic Habit, 23346.
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such as Miriam and Deborah, or an exception such as the Hasmonean Queen Salome, in neither the First nor the Second Temple periods can one nd any trace of women holding dened communal positions. Thus, when such a phenomenon occurs, it is clearly due to synchronic forces impacting on the local Jewish communities. Although Jewish communities were responsive to their immediate social and religious contexts, there were some issues on which they stood apart from their surrounding culture.85 One such area concerns the mixed seating arrangements that were prevalent within the synagogues of both Palestine and the Diaspora. In order to fully appreciate the uniqueness of this practice, it is important to view the phenomenon in the context of the wider culture. Roman society regularly practiced segregation in public arenas, along class, ethnic, or gender lines.86 This separation was adopted by the early church, and while there assuredly were dierences from one tradition and locale to another in the Christian world, the main thrust was one of a division between clergy and laypeople, men and women, full-edged Christians and catechumens.87 The Didascalia Apostolorum, a document originally written in Greek some time in the third century (and translated into Syriac in the fourth), has the following to say in this regard: And for the presbyters let there be assigned a place in the eastern part of the house; and let the bishops throne be set in their midst, and let the presbyters sit with him. And again, let the laymen sit in another part of the house toward the east. For so it should be, that in the eastern part of the house, the presbyters sit with the bishops, and next the lay men, and then the women. 88
85. For all the prominence of women in this region, van Bremens concluding remarks in her study should be borne in mind: As I hope to have shown in this study, the causal chain of greater legal freedom ability to control and manage wealthaccess to power and status could not be further away from reality. The great paradox is rather that the apparent increase in power and status (greater visible wealth, an increase in female civic oce-holding, and a multiplication of civic honours for women) was accompanied by a loss in citizen-status and a public image that emphasized, above all, the familial aspects of womanhood (Limits of Participation, 302). 86. See above, Chap. 4, note 88. 87. See, for example, R. S. Kraemer, Her Share of the Blessings, 107. 88. Didascalia Apostolorum 12 (p. 119). See also the more detailed exposition of seating arrangements in the Apostolic Constitutions 2, 57: But if any one be found sitting out of his place, let him be rebuked by the deacon, as a manager of the foreship, and be removed into the place proper for him; for the Church is not only like a ship, but also like a sheepfold. For as shepherds place all the brute creatures distinctly, I mean goats and sheep, according to their kind and age, and still every one runs together, like to his like; so is it to be in the Church. Let the young persons sit by themselves, if there be a place for them; if not, let them stand upright. But let those that are already stricken in years sit in order. For the children which stand, let their fathers and mothers take them to them [i.e., the children to their parentsL.L.] Let the younger women also sit by themselves, if there be a place for them; but if there be not, let them stand behind the women. Let those women which are married, and have children, be placed by themselves; but let the virgins and the widows, and the elder women stand or sit before all the rest; and let the deacon be the disposer of the places, that every one of those that come in may go to his proper place, and may not sit at the entrance.
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Why did the synagogue continue to maintain this practice of mixed seating, which was exceptional in the world of Late Antiquity? Perhaps it was owing to the absence of a tradition to the contrary, the apparent equality of women in many ritual ceremonies, as set forth in Deuteronomy,89 or the fact that no kind of hierarchical system existed within general Jewish society in the post-70 era (unlike the situation in the Roman, Byzantine, and Christian worlds). Alternatively, it may have been because, when all is said and done, the synagogue was essentially a communal institution, and thus any kind of division between its members was foreign; this pattern may have carried over into the liturgical setting as well. Whatever the reason, the reality seems to have been the continuation of open seating within the synagogue, a situation that invited the ridicule and disparagement of detractors such as Chrysostom. Some time in the early Middle Ages, for reasons unknown to us, this practice changed, and separate seating was nally introduced into the synagogue. By the eleventh and twelfth centuries, as is evident from the Cairo Genizah material, the custom of separate seating, in Egypt at least, was already well in place. The above sources explicitly note a separation or partition (meitzah).90 Thus, at some point between the seventh and eighth centuries (our last-dated sources, archaeological and literary, for Late Antiquity) and the eleventh century (the sources from Egypt) this division was adopted by Jewish communities because of either Islamic or Christian inuence, newly developing religious stringencies regarding the impurity of women, or perhaps both these external and internal considerations.91 A second area in which Jewish communities appear to have resisted contemporary inuences was in the denial of any liturgical function to women. In the Greco-Roman world, women played both important and secondary roles in cultic settings. They served as priests and held other kinds of roles in the temple worship of a wide variety of deities,
89. Weinfeld, Deuteronomy, 291. Cf. also Tigay, Deuteronomy, 499502; and Mathews, Clash of Gods, 17071. 90. Goitein, Mediterranean Society, II, 144; see also idem, Womens Gallery, 314. 91. See Z. Safrai (Dukhan, Aron and Teva, 7879), who suggests a sixth- to eighth-century date and assumes that this separation was ultimately due to religious developments among the Jews themselves: In Christian churches built during this time [the sixth to the eighth centuries] balconies were built to serve as womens galleries. Nevertheless, it does not necessarily follow that the churches inuenced the building of the synagogue or, for that matter, that practices of modesty prevalent in Muslim society inuenced Jewish society. On the contrary, it would appear that internal Jewish instincts tended towards increased strictness regarding ritual purity and these instincts also brought about the adoption of stricter laws of modesty which found expression in the construction of a separate balcony for women in the synagogue. On the increased strictness regarding the impurity of the menstruant and its eect on women in the synagogue, see S. J. D. Cohen, Purity and Piety, 1079; idem, Menstruants and the Sacred, 28487, 291; Ta-Shma, Synagogal Sanctity, 35664. Swartz ( Like the Ministering Angels, 16566) suggests that this increasing concern with impurity stemmed from pietist groups and not necessarily from rabbinic circles, but Karaite inuence may also have been a factor here.
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as well as in temples devoted to emperor worship and the provincial cults (for example, those under the auspices of the Asiarchs). Perhaps because of the plethora of gods and goddesses in the Greco-Roman pantheon, paganism accorded a prominent role to women in many facets of the temple cult: they were present in the temple, guarded and maintained the premises, oered sacrices on a regular basis, and sometimes organized the major festivals.92 Similarly, women played important roles in early Christianity, at rst in the early church and, later, in a number of prominent sects. Whether because of the challenge of early Christian ideology to many of the social and religious assumptions of the age, the emphasis on asceticism, communal living, the downplaying of marriage and family, heightened spirituality, or a strong apocalyptic orientation, such Christian settings allowed women to free themselves from the shackles of society and tradition and make their contribution.93 As long as sects ourished (until the fourth century), women were a wellrecognized and inuential factor in such frameworks. In certain localesfor example, in Asia Minorthese sects even posed a serious threat to the more normative Christianity then crystallizing.94 In this respect as well, Jewish society was quite dierent from its social environs. To the best of our knowledge, women did not play any kind of liturgical role in the synagogue, and the reasons for this have yet to be fully explored. Perhaps it was the Semitic, Near Eastern roots of Israelite tradition that might explain why Jews looked askance upon womens cultic participation, at times associating it with temple prostitution.95 Or perhaps it was because of the monotheistic nature of Judaism: at the center of Judaism is one God, of masculine gender. Interestingly, as Christianity developed in Late Antiquity, and as the sects disappeared (or were eliminated), so, too, did the role of women as communal liturgical gures.96 Moreover, with the rise of Islam, investiture of religious leadership exclusively in the hands of males became the accepted pattern. Whatever may have been the reason, the fact remains that in monotheistic settings an ocial liturgical role for women was always peripheral, if not almost negligible.
92. See R. S. Kraemer, Her Share of the Blessings, 8092; idem, Maenads, nos. 7883. For a late reference to women as working in academies as custodians ( ,)see Targum Jonathan of Judg. 5:24. 93. Meeks, Image of the Androgyne, 165208; Witherington III, Women in the Earliest Churches, 183210; Fiorenza, In Memory of Her, parts IIIII; R. S. Kraemer, Her Share of the Blessings, 15790. See, however, the comments of Av. Cameron, Neither Male nor Female, 6068. 94. B. S. Anderson and Zinsser, History of Their Own, I, 6784. 95. See, however, the comments of Gruber, Women in the Cult, 3548. 96. Cf. Av. Cameron, Mediterranean World, 14851; Torjesen, When Women Were Priests, 15576; Sawyer, Women and Religion, 91116.
fifteen
PRIESTS
he destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in 70 brought an end to a millennium of priestly political and religious hegemony. For an elite that had been accorded the highest status in Jewish society and that had shouldered the bulk of the ritual, cultural, judicial, and political responsibilities for many centuries, the sudden absence of its base of power was undoubtedly traumatic.1 It has generally been assumed that in the post-70 era, the priesthood became a mere vestige of its former self, a kind of honorary caste among the Jews, enjoying no real standing or authority, and opposed by the sages (as was the case before 70).2 Nevertheless, rabbinic protestations regarding certain second-century fast-day ceremonies in the Galilee may have been due, inter alia, to the prominent role played by priests in this ritual, as in pre-70 days.3 Similarly, the silence of rabbinic literature regarding Julians plan to rebuild the Temple in 363 has been interpreted as an indication of the sages reservations regard1. On the role of priests in the days of the Temple, see de Vaux, Ancient Israel, 245474; Schrer, History, II, 237308; Jeremias, Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus, 147221; M. Stern, Aspects of Jewish Society: Priesthood, 561612; Burtchaell, From Synagogue to Church, 25356; S. Schwartz, Josephus and Judaean Politics, 58109. 2. See, for example, B Yoma 71b; T Sotah 13, 8 (pp. 23334); T Menaot 13, 21 (p. 533); B Rosh Hashanah 29b; Bchler, Political and Social Leaders, 6970; Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 99103; Aderet, From Destruction to Restoration, 28089; Miller, Studies, 88103. 3. T Taanit 1, 13 (pp. 32728); Lieberman, TK, V, 1075; Miller, Studies, 10315.
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ing the possible return of the priesthood to a position of power and authority among the Jews.4 Of late, however, this picture of an eclipsed priestly class has undergone some serious reevaluation. Goodblatt has argued that the Bar-Kokhba revolt was, in fact, motivated by priestly ideology and involved extensive priestly participation.5 Kimelman has claimed that there was a priestly oligarchy in Sepphoris that was well entrenched in the leadership of the city, opposing much of the rabbinic activity there.6 Archaeological material has brought to light evidence of a half-dozen plaques on display in synagogues with inscriptions listing the twenty-four priestly courses (see below). It has also been noted that priests were amply represented among the sages throughout much of the talmudic period. The Yavnean period (70132), as well as the third and fourth centuries, witnessed a large number of prominent sages who were priests.7 Moreover, it has been suggested that antipriestly rabbinic polemics should be taken not only as an indication of rabbinic antipathy, but also as evidence of continued priestly inuence within Jewish society.8 Trifon and more recently Irshai have gathered a number of sources from Byzantine Palestine that seem to point to a more central role played by priests in Jewish aairs of the Galilee in general and in Tiberias in particular.9 Scholars have also recently posited the possible inuential role of priests in a variety of Jewish cultural expressions, from the creation of the piyyut and mystical traditions to certain motifs on synagogue mosaic oors.10 Thus, it is now clear that the place of priests and the priesthood in Jewish life of Late Antiquity merits reconsideration; in the absence of the Patriarchate and an identiable rabbinic class from the fth century onward, Jewish leadership was in a state of transition and was undoubtedly a complex reality. It seems that priestly circles, too, were staking a claim for some sort of leadership status.11 One of the most striking expressions of priestly group consciousness in the post-70 era is the fact that many, if not most, priests continued to remain a separate and distinct
4. Avi-Yonah, Jews of Palestine, 19698. Goodmans comments (Function of Minim, 50110, esp. 507), although addressing a dierent issue, may be equally valid herenamely, what did not interest the sages, they simply ignored. 5. Goodblatt, Title Nasi, 11332; idem, Monarchic Principle, 22829. See also Trifon, Aspects of Internal Politics, 2426. See also S. Schwartz, Josephus and Judaean Politics, 7282. 6. Kimelman, Conict, 13547. See, however, the reservation of Miller (Cantankerous Sepphoreans) regarding this thesis. 7. Trifon, Jewish Priests, 141, 175; 219; L. Levine, R. Simeon b. Yohai, 17374; Kimelman, Conict, 14243. 8. S. A. Cohen, Three Crowns, 15863. 9. Trifon, Jewish Priests, 130276; Irshai, Confronting a Christian Empire, 187204. 10. On the piyyut and mystical traditions, see below; on priestly inuences on Jewish art, see Khnel, Synagogue Floor Mosaic, 3143; L. Levine, Contextualizing Jewish Art, 91131. Many aspects of Jewish cultural life in Byzantine Palestine are discussed in L. I. Levine (ed.), Continuity and Renewal. 11. S. A. Cohen, Three Crowns, 15863; L. Levine, Caesareas Synagogues, 67073.
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entity throughout Late Antiquity. Organized into twenty-four priestly courses scattered throughout Judaea for centuries prior to the loss of Jerusalem, they appear to have retained this framework even afterward.12 Some time in the century or so following 70, the priestly courses took up residence in the central and eastern Galilee. Opinion diers as to when this actually occurred, and a number of suggestions have been put forth: immediately after the rst revolt against Rome (6674); after the Bar-Kokhba revolt (132135); or, what seems to be far less likely, somewhat later in the third century.13 Whichever time frame one adoptsand perhaps each contains some truth, and we are, in fact, dealing with a process that transpired over a number of generationsthe presence of priests in some twenty-ve Galilean villages and cities by Late Antiquity is clearly attested in both literary and archaeological data. Most of the locales noted were apparently small settlements, and thus the priests may have constituted a majority, or at least a very recognizable minority, in each.14 Even in a place as large as Sepphoris, priestly inuence might have been signicant; in fact, the priests are singled out on several occasions as having been particularly wealthy.15 Priestly involvement in the synagogue could have been expressed in one of several ways: they might have been benefactors or synagogue ocials, or have had a role in synagogue liturgy. The rst two categories have little to do with priestly lineage per se, and the role of a priest as benefactor or synagogue leader was probably acquired for other reasons (personality, family ties, wealth, or wisdom).16 In most cases, these people just happened to be priests. The third category, however, is quite dierent, and any role played by priests in synagogue liturgy was directly connected to their Aaronic ancestry. Let us briey discuss each of these categories.
12. The pioneering works in this regard have been those of S. Klein: Beitrge; Sefer Hayishuv, 16265; Galilee, 6268, 17792. See also Urbach, Mishmarot, 30427; Kahane, Priestly Courses, 929. 13. After 70: S. Klein, Galilee, 6667. After 135: Kahane, Priestly Courses, 14; Miller, Studies, 132; Z. Safrai, Pirqei Galil, 27174; idem, Did the Priestly Courses? 28792; Oppenheimer, Galilee, 5357. Urbach, on the other hand, dates the main transition from Judaea to the Galilee, presumably that of the priests as well, to the post115117 era; see his From Judaea to Galilee, 6669. Third century: Trifon, Did the Priestly Courses? 7793. 14. See what appears to have been a tomb reserved expressly for priests at Bet Shearim; see Schwabe and Lifshitz, Beth Shearim, II, no. 14. 15. Sepphoris: Meyers et al., Sepphoris, 1718; Hoglund and E. M. Meyers, Residential Quarter, 3942. Wealthy priests: SifreDeuteronomy 352 (p. 409)Most priests are wealthy; B Pesaim 49a; Midrash Hagadol, Leviticus 22:13 (p. 618)R. Yoanan said: One who wishes to become rich should cling to a descendent of Aaron. See also Liebermans comment (TK, VIII, 762): And know that the most wealthy tannaim [except for the Patriarchs] were all priests. 16. Even in rabbinic circles, when the deposition of Rabban Gamaliel II and the appointment of R. Elazar b. Azariah were discussed, the priestly factor was one of a number of possible considerations in choosing a successor (B Berakhot 27b; Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7d). I am assuming that the reference to R. Elazars descent from Ezra was intended to highlight his priestly lineage and not his rabbinic connections.
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87. Inscription from the Susiya synagogue noting a donation by R. Asi the priest at a feast for his son, R. Yoanan the sofer.
BENEFACTORS
The striking example of a synagogue founded and headed by a priestly family over a number of generations, as evidenced in the pre-70 Theodotos inscription from Jerusalem, nds no parallel elsewhere, either in the rst century or in Late Antiquity.17 The only other instance of a donation by a priest in the rst century comes from Berenice, where one of the contributors listed, Cartisthenes, son of Archias, is so identied.18 Three inscriptions from the Judaean region of Byzantine Palestine name priests as donors. An Aramaic inscription from Eshtemoa reads as follows: May he be remembered for good, Lazar the priest and his sons, who gave one tremissis [one-third of a gold dinar] from his assets [or property]. 19 Another Aramaic inscription, from neighboring Susiya, is more elaborate and was likewise found as part of a mosaic oor in the synagogues atrium: May he be remembered for good, the holy master, R. Isi the priest [who is also honored with the title of ] biribbi, who made this mosaic and plastered the walls, [a contribution] which he donated at a [wedding?] banquet for his son, R. Yoanan the priest and scribe biribbi. Peace on Israel. Amen (g. 87).20 In the Naaran synagogue near Jericho, a centrally placed inscription reads as follows: May he be remembered for good, Pinhas the priest, son of Justus, who gave the cost of the mosaic from his own re17. See above, Chap. 3. 18. See above, Chap. 4. 19. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 74. 20. Ibid., no. 75. S. Safrai (In Times of Temple and Mishnah, I, 15758) has suggested that the R. Isi mentioned in this inscription is to be identied with the amoraic sage R. Asi of Tiberias. See also Amit, Synagogues, 7576. The prominence of priests as benefactors in these two locales (Eshtemoa and Susiya) is suggestive. Since these two synagogues (along with nearby Maon and Anim) seem to reect a desire to imitate Temple practice (as in the placing of entrances in an easterly direction), evidence of priestly benefactions may not be coincidental.
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sources and property [?]. Next to this is an inscription naming his wife: May she be remembered for good, Rebecca the wife of Pinas. 21 Presumably, Rebecca made a contribution of her own. It may not be coincidental that these priestly inscriptions were found adjacent to the menorah, a symbol that might easily have been associated with the Temple. The only other inscription noting a donor priest in fth-century Byzantine Palestine was discovered in the Galilee, in the recently discovered Sepphoris synagogue: May he be remembered for good, Yudan, son of Isaac the priest, and Parigri his daughter. Amen. Amen. 22
OFFICIALS
The Theodotos inscription ought to be mentioned in this context as well. Therein are recorded three consecutive generations of priests who held the title archisynagogos. Two examples of priestly leadership from the Diaspora of Late Antiquity are noteworthy. One comes from Dura Europos, where the most important member of the community, Samuel the priest, functioned as the leading presbyter and archon. It was in his term of oce that the elaborate second stage of this synagogue building was erected. His name appears in no fewer than three Aramaic inscriptions and one Greek inscription, all written on ceiling tiles.23 The Aramaic texts are basically the same, recording the date of the building and the auspices under which the work was carried out. To cite the fullest one: This house was built in the year 556, this corresponding to the second year of Philip Julius Caesar; in the eldership [ ]of the priest Samuel the archon, son of Yedaaya. Now those who stood in charge of this work were . . . The Greek inscription is even shorter: Samuel, son of Idaeus, elder [] of the Jews, built it. The second example of priestly leadership in the Diaspora comes from Sardis, where one Samoe was identied as a priest and sophodidaskalos. The inscription is prominently displayed in the middle of the synagogues main hall, perhaps in the very place where Samoe sat and instructed the community.24 Priests who occupied ocial positions are noted elsewhere in the Diaspora as well: in Aphrodisias, the only priest mentioned was also a presbeutes (= elder); in Rome, several priests were archons and one was an archisynagogue.25 The Theodosian Code preserves one decree that, at rst glance, appears to refer explicitly to priests. Constantine issued the following edict in 330: The same Augustus to
21. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 5859. 22. Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption, 41. 23. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 26368, 277. 24. Hanfmann and Bloom, Samoe, Priest and Teacher of Wisdom, 10*14*; Kraabel, Impact of the Discovery, 18384, 18990; Kroll, Greek Inscriptions, 1718. 25. Aphrodisias: Reynolds and Tannenbaum, Jews and God-Fearers, 5. Rome: Noy, JIWE, II, 538.
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the priests, the archsynagogues [sic], fathers of synagogues and the others who serve in the same place. We order that the priests, archsynagogues [sic], fathers of synagogues, and the others who serve in synagogues shall be free from all corporal liturgy. 26 Although from this source it might seem that the place of the priest was of cardinal importance in the functioning of the early fourth-century synagogue, this evidence is mitigated by two factors. First of all, no other source, except for Epiphanius Panarion, mentions priests in a functional role within the synagogue. This is not an insignicant omission, at least with regard to the Theodosian Code. We have had occasion to note that from the end of the fourth century, many synagogue ocials, but not priests, are mentioned in edicts.27 Secondly, the meaning of the term priest in the above source is not as clear as it may seem at rst; the title may refer to any type of Jewish ocial whose role was analogous to that of an ocial in a pagan or Christian context, and thus would not necessarily refer to a person from the seed of Aaron.28 Therefore, there is little to derive from this last source as regards the role of priests in the synagogue of Late Antiquity.29
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88. Three fragments of a plaque from Caesarea listing the twenty-four priestly courses.
worship, in which priests played a central role. These elements included the sacricial service on Sabbaths and holidays, which found expression in the Musaf Amidah, various Torah readings, and the detailed description of the atonement ceremony held in the Temple, which became an integral part of the Yom Kippur liturgy.31 Yahalom has suggested that priests may have been responsible for transmitting (if not composing) liturgical poetry memorializing the Temple throughout Late Antiquity.32 Commencing in the Byzantine period, the piyyut not only featured memories of the Temple, but often focused on the twenty-four priestly courses.33 Thus, in a continuous, though indirect, way the central role of the priests, past and future, was brought to the attention of synagogue worshippers. Priests were given priority in the Torah-reading ceremony. Already according to the Mishnah, the rst to read from the Torah was a priest, and even if a priest was willing to
31. See above, Chap. 6. 32. Yahalom, Priestly Palestinian Poetry, 5658. 33. See S. Klein, Galilee, 17792. Fleischer has done much work in this regard over the past decades; see his New Shivatot, 3055; Regarding the Courses, 14161; and Additional Data, 4760. See also L. Levine, Caesareas Synagogues, 671.
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cede this right, he was not allowed to do so.34 By the amoraic period, there were several attempts by rabbis to set an order for the aliyot, but the rst two were universally reserved for a priest and Levite, respectively.35 One particular mishnaic source may allude to a central role played by priests in the synagogue liturgy. The following is recorded: Whoever reads the prophetic passages also leads in the recitation of the Shema, leads in the Amidah, and raises his hand [as part of the priestly blessing]. 36 Although both talmuds try to explain away the implications of this passage or to move the discussion in another direction, the plain meaning may well be that priests often (usually?) would function in these capacities. Since the priests alone were empowered to bless the congregation, it is they who may well be referred to as reading from the Prophets and leading the prayer service. If this had been the case either at a particular time or in certain locales, it would be an important piece of evidence pointing to priestly prominence in some second- and early third-century synagogues.37 Finally, the priests played a signicant role during the Amidah service by reciting the priestly blessing. This custom was apparently transferred to the synagogue following the destruction of the Temple, although some have claimed that it was practiced there beforehand as well.38 The recitation of this blessing was considered holy, and a number of procedures transferred directly from Temple practice were introduced to emphasize the moment. The blessing concluded the Amidah recitation, just as in the pre-70 days it concluded the daily Tamid sacrice, while on certain days it was also recited just before the locking of the Temple gates.39 R. Yoanan b. Zakkai decreed that priests should oer these blessings barefoot, as had been done in the Temple.40 Likewise, following Temple practice, priests would wash before blessing.41 They would recite a special benediction before blessing the congregation and, when blessing, would spread their ngers, apparently as had been Temple practice.42 The prayer leader would formally invite the priests to commence the ceremony,43
34. M Gittin 5, 8; B Ketubot 25b. 35. B Gittin 59b60a. 36. M Megillah 4, 5. See also the comments in Albeck, MishnahMoed, 5034. 37. Cf., however, the explanation in Elbogen, Studies, 599: whoever is capable of the one is capable of doing the others as well. It is likewise engaging to consider the rabbinic prohibitions on wearing white and removing ones shoes when leading services (M Megillah 4, 8), perhaps a reference to priestly norms attested by earlier Temple practices. 38. See, for example, Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 6266; Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 114; S. Safrai, Pilgrimage, 8 n. 10. See also Schrer, History, II, 45354; and above, Chap. 5. 39. M Tamid 5, 1; M Taanit 4, 1. 40. B Sotah 40a; B Rosh Hashanah 31b. 41. B Sotah 39a; M Tamid 1, 2; 2, 1. 42. B Sotah 39ab; Targum Jonathan of Num. 6:23. 43. SifreNumbers 39 (p. 43).
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whereupon they recited a special prayer before leaving their seats and another at the conclusion of the ceremony.44 The place where the priests stood when blessing the people was called the dukhan (presumably, as in the Temple), and this ceremony was often referred to, primarily in Babylonian sources, as simply ascending the dukhan. 45 The congregation would face the priests, although by Late Antiquity an interesting dierence between Palestinian and Babylonian practices had crystallized. In the former, priests would face the ark (with their backs to the congregation), while in the latter, priests would face the congregation, as had been the practice earlier.46 Some magical eect seems to have been associated with this ritual in Babylonia. We read of a sage advising people who had dreams but did not know their meaning: they were to stand in front of the priests at the time of the benediction and ask God for favor, optimally concluding their request precisely at the termination of the priestly blessing so that the congregation would answer both blessing and request with Amen. 47 In the third century, it was the custom not to look at priests during the blessing, presumably owing to the sanctity of the moment.48 Moreover, as was the case with other central components of the liturgynamely, repetition of the Amidah, the Qaddish, and the reading of the Torahthe priestly blessing could be oered only in the presence of ten males.49 It was important that priests recite this blessing even when they were the only males in the congregation. In response to the query as to precisely whom they were to be blessing, it is stated that they were blessing Jews everywhere (lit., to the north, south, east, and west). And to the further question, who would respond Amen to these blessings, the answer was, the women and children.50 Whatever the similarities between synagogal and Temple practice with respect to the priestly blessing, there were also some substantial dierences that served to preserve a distinction between the original setting and its post-70 implementation. In the Temple, the priestly blessings were recited without interruption; outside the Temple, each blessing was said separately.51 As a result, following each of the blessings, special responses were introduced into the synagogue ritual for the congregation to recite.52 It seems that a number of dierent customs crystallized, each emphasizing certain phrases or verses; this, then, led to attempts by the rabbis to limit the number of responses and to determine how and when such verses were to be said.
44. B Sotah 39ab. 45. B Rosh Hashanah 31b; B agigah 16a; B Sukkah 51a; Tanuma, Noah, 20 (p. 24a). See also Z. Safrai, Dukhan, Aron and Teva, 6971. With regard to Levites, see B Taanit 29a. 46. T Megillah 3, 21 (p. 360); Dierences in Customs, no. 36 (p. 156). 47. B Berakhot 55b. 48. B agigah 16a. 49. M Megillah 4, 3; B Megillah 23b. 50. Y Berakhot 5, 4, 9d. 51. M Tamid 7, 2. 52. Y Berakhot 1, 1, 2c; B Sotah 39b. See Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 6364.
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The importance of the priests for the recitation of these blessings is preserved in Palestinian practice, but not in Babylonian. In the latter, if no priests were present, then the prayer leader would recite these verses (which is the accepted practice to this day). However, such was not the case in Palestine; if no priests were present, then the priestly benediction was not said at all.53 As noted, priests seem to have been particularly active as paytanim in Late Antiquity. The rst known paytan was Yose b. Yose, who referred to himself as a high priest. Other prominent priestly paytanim include: Shimon Megas; Yoanan the priest, son of Joshua the priest; Pinas the priest of Kafra; and Haduta. The fact that many piyyutim deal with Temple-related matters as well as the twenty-four priestly courses may be due, in part at least, to the priestly lineage of so many synagogue poets.54 Certainly, the very positive portrayal of the priests and priestly cultic functions in many piyyutim could not but enhance priestly status within the congregation and may also point to priestly authorship.55 One other possible connection between priests and synagogue liturgy should be noted. It has often been claimed that priestly traditions lie behind many of the mystical Hekhalot sources, and that this mystical literature, which focuses on heavenly ascent, emanated from priestly circles in Late Antiquity. Moreover, many of the prayers that constitute an integral part of these mystical experiences are strikingly similar to those familiar in synagogue liturgy. The oft-recurring question is whether these mystical circles inuenced synagogue practice or whether they appropriated known liturgical excerpts from the synagogue context. No consensus has yet been reached. Were one to assume a connection between priestly traditions and Hekhalot literature, on the one hand, and the inuence of Hekhalot prayers on synagogue liturgy, on the other, then an avenue of profound priestly inuence on the synagogue of Late Antiquity would open. For the moment, however, this option remains moot.56 Still, enough evidence has accumulated of late to posit a far more prominent role for priests in the synagogue setting of Late Antiquity than has been heretofore assumed. Whether such priestly prominence was always there but only recently came to the atten53. Dierences in Customs, no. 29 (pp. 14546), and Margalioths comment on p. 145 in n. 1. 54. Mirsky, Yosse ben Yosse, 10; Fleischer, Early Paytanim of Tiberias, 36871; Yahalom, Priestly Palestinian Poetry, 5657. In addition to the liturgy itself, it has been suggested of late that priestly views found expression in the Sepphoris synagogue mosaic; see Yahalom, Sepphoris Synagogue Mosaic, 89 91; L. Levine, Contextualizing Jewish Art, 11530. 55. Swartz, Ritual about Myth about Ritual, 13555; idem, Sage, Priest, and Poet. 56. The literature on this issue is extensive; see, for example, Gruenwald, From Apocalypticism, 12573; idem, Impact of Priestly Traditions, 65120; Elior, From Earthly Temple to Heavenly Shrines, 217 67; and, more recently, eadem, Temple and Chariot, 21276. For a dierent and somewhat controversial connection between this literature and the synagogue, see D. J. Halperin, Faces of the Chariot; and the reviews of Elior (Merkabah Mysticism, 23349) and E. R. Wolfson (Halperins Faces, 496500).
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tion of scholars studying the Byzantine period as a result of additional sources of information, or whether it was indeed something new in synagogue and communal life, the product of changed circumstances in Late Antiquity (especially the emergence of Christianity and its clergy), remains to be claried.57
57. Arguing for the latter are Irshai, Confronting a Christian Empire, 189204; Yahalom, Poetry and Society, 10716.
sixteen
LITURGY
here is no dimension more reective of the growth and evolution of the synagogue in antiquity than its liturgy.1 Constituting one of many activities in the institutions early stages, the ritual component of the synagogue eventually became a dominant and denitive element. At rst it included the reading of Scriptures, a translation of the reading, and some sort of homily or instruction;2 by Late Antiquity, the liturgy had evolved into a rich and varied worship setting that included not only these three components, but also regular communal prayers and poetic recitations ( piyyutim), especially on Sabbaths and holidays. The development of synagogue liturgy was far from linear. Some practices appeared
1. The term liturgy will be used with regard to public religious rituals within the context of the synagogue. Clearly, rituals may have been performed elsewhere as well: in the home, academy, or other religious settings such as an outdoor plaza. The term has a long and varied history. In the Greco-Roman world it usually meant some sort of public service (although at times it could have had a cultic association), and in the early church it was often limited to the Eucharist celebration. The Hebrew equivalent to the Greek leitourgia is avodah, meaning the service [of God]. Originally this referred specically to Temple sacrice (M Avot 1, 2), but was later applied to prayer as well (SifreDeuteronomy 41 [pp. 87 88]; and Goldin, Studies in Midrash, 2738; see also Tanuma, Vayishla, 9). On the term liturgy, see, inter alia, Martimort, Church at Prayer, 718; Jones et al., Study of Liturgy, passim; Reif, Judaism and Hebrew Prayer, 7172. 2. See Neh. 8:58; and above, Chap. 5.
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for a while and were then suppressed, sometimes with relative success (such as the recitation of the Decalogue);3 at other times, prayers were eventually incorporated into the liturgy, though not always in the place originally intended. In an attempt to incorporate two competing versions of the same prayer, each was often inserted into a dierent prayer service, as was the case with alternative versions of several of the blessings accompanying the Shema (see below). Finally, some periods appear to have been characterized by vigorous liturgical creativity and others by less dramatic consolidation. Not all worship components underwent growth and development at the same time or at the same pace. In the tannaitic period, for example, the Yavneh generation of sages engaged in intensive religious creativity, especially in the area of prayer. This is attributable to the recent loss of Jerusalem and its Temple, and the concomitant need to nd adequate substitutes for a community that still vividly remembered the centrality of that institution. Daily sacricial worship at the Jerusalem Temple, like that practiced by the pagans in their temples,4 was a pivotal religious function, and Jewish life now needed a substitute expression. The synagogue became the logical setting for this communal activity. This intensive Yavnean activity was also due to the strong leadership of Rabban Gamaliel, whose vigorous pursuit of his declared goals provided the impetus and framework for sustained eorts in this regard.5 Only such a strong-willed person could have dealt with the reservations, if not outright opposition, of many sages who were not comfortable with either the pace or direction of his program. While rabbinic liturgical deliberations continued throughout the post-Yavneh second century as well, these appear to have progressed at a much slower pace and to have been concerned more with the details of
3. See B Berakhot 12a; Y Berakhot 1, 5, 3c; and comments in Urbach, Role of the Ten Commandments, 16189; Fleischer, Eretz-Israel Prayer, 25974. Cf., however, Erlich (Earliest Versions of the Amidah, 1738), who has adopted a linear approach in explaining the development of certain prayers/ benedictions in the Amidah. 4. As in the temple of Dionysius at Teos, or of Asclepius in Athens and Pergamum; see MacMullen, Paganism, 149 n. 78. See also Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 16479. 5. R. Yoanan ben Zakkai apparently began this process immediately following the Temples destruction, but his measures were limited in scope and probably in their impact as well. See Alon, Jews, Judaism and the Classical World, 31443. Of late, some scholars have cast doubts on the historicity of rabbinic accounts regarding the Yavnean period, assuming that many (most?) of these traditions reect later historical contexts, particularly from the fourth century. See, for example, Boyarin, Tale of Two Synods, 2162. With regard to the issue at hand at least, such a skeptical approach appears unwarranted. On the one hand, as has been argued above (Chap. 5), the evidence for the existence of communal prayer in pre-70 Judaea is inconsequential while, on the other, numerous comments of sages from the mid second century onward are aimed at eshing out a prayer format already in place, at least within rabbinic circles (see below). Thus, the supposition that substantial liturgical activity took place in between, i.e., in Yavneh of the late rst and early second centuries, is certainly justied.
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alternative traditions resulting from the innovations of the earlier period. This slackened pace may have also been the result of the upheavals caused by the Bar-Kokhba revolt, the ensuing persecution, and the large-scale migration of Jews (sages included) from Judaea to the Galilee and beyond. By the third century, the enhanced signicance of the prayer component was now reected in the synagogues architecture. Beginning in the course of this century, Galileantype buildings regularly had their ornate facades and entranceways, as well as their interior plans, facing in the direction of Jerusalem. Other types of synagogues in the Galilee at this time, such as the one at Khirbet Shema, also oriented their interiors toward Jerusalem. The importance of a Jerusalem orientation is related to prayer, and especially to the recitation of the Amidah. Moreover, the religious dimension of the synagogue now began to be emphasized via its art. Appearing rst at Dura Europos and then with increasing frequency elsewhere throughout Late Antiquity, synagogues utilized religious symbols (e.g., the menorah) and biblical motifs, while some of the scenes at Dura and Sepphoris have been interpreted as reecting the synagogue liturgical experience.6 In what follows, we shall discuss the development of synagogue worship in two separate stages. The rst is the tannaitic period (ca. 70225), and the second, Late Antiquity (the third through seventh centuries). This periodization is based on a number of factors. Firstly, the relevant rabbinic sources change from one era to the next. The corpus of tannaitic works, together with the tannaitic traditions embedded in the two talmuds (i.e., the baraitot), serve as sources of information for the earlier time frame. The amoraic materiali.e., the two talmuds and the aggadic midrashimin addition to piyyutim, targumim, and several post-talmudic compilations, i.e., the Dierences in Customs between the People of the East and the People of Eretz-Israel and Tractate Soferim, constitute the second set of sources. This latter group is far greater not only in quantity, but also in scope. Thus, with regard to the earlier tannaitic period, this discussion will, of necessity, be limited to rabbinic literature and to what the rabbis legislated and presumably practiced within their own circles. We have no evidence, neither literary nor archaeological, as to how rabbinic discussions and decisions at this time impacted on the community at large. For Late Antiquity, however, both rabbinic and non-rabbinic literary sources, combined with inscriptions and other archaeological nds, oer considerable information about what was actually happening in some synagogues of Roman-Byzantine Palestine and Sassanian Babylonia. Of no less consequence for the proposed division is the fact that each group of sources appears to reect a decidedly dierent stage in the evolution of synagogue liturgy. This is particularly evident with respect to two components of this liturgy that made their appearance during these latter centuries: communal prayer and piyyut. Regarding the
6. See L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah, 14553; Gutmann, Programmatic Painting, 13754; Fine, Art and the Liturgical Context, 22737; S. Schwartz, Imperialism, 24574.
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former, the earlier (i.e., tannaitic) period can generally be characterized as one of conceptualization and preliminary composition, the second as one of consolidation and amplication; by the end of Late Antiquity or, at most, a century or two later, there was a further stage of development, that of amalgamation and standardization.7 The latter liturgical form, piyyut, was introduced into synagogue worship only in the second stage (i.e., the fth or sixth century) and constituted an entirely new genre in synagogue worship. These and other developments in the realm of synagogue worship are considered in the present chapter.8
METHODOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Before commencing the discussion, it is necessary to address a number of methodological concerns. The study of liturgy, whether Christian or Jewish, is fraught with pitfalls.9 First and foremost, standardized Jewish liturgical texts made their appearance only toward the end of the rst millennium. Until then, liturgical traditions, particularly those relating to prayer, were in the main transmitted orally. All that is available to us before that time are snippets of information regarding specic prayers and practices. If our task were only to try to t these pieces together into some sort of coherent picture, matters might be manageable. Unfortunately, the issues are far more complex. In the rst place, we are faced with the problem of the reliability of the texts at hand. In not a few cases, there are textual variants in the phraseology of prayers of greater and lesser degrees of importance. This is true not only of a major prayer such as the Amidah, but also of shorter blessings such as Who has not made me a gentile, . . . an ignoramus, . . . a woman. 10 Secondly, our sources indicate that liturgical practice was far from xed. Alternative
7. One could add an additional stage of codication and institutionalization primarily under the aegis of the Babylonian gaonate in the ninth and tenth centuries c.e.; see Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, VII, 62134; L. A. Homan, Canonization, 19; Reif, Judaism and Hebrew Prayer, 122206; Petuchowski, Liturgy of the Synagogue, 47; and below. 8. In what follows the focus will be on worship as it developed in the synagogue context. The literature on Jewish worship generally in this period is vast, and no attempt will be made to deal with many of the philological, textual, and theological issues connected with individual prayers; otherwise, the presentation would quickly become unwieldy. 9. Much has been written on methodology in the study of liturgy. See, for example, Heinemann, Prayer, 112; Fiensy, Prayers Alleged to Be Jewish, 110, 20942; Sarason, On the Use of Method, 97 172; Zahavy, New Approach, 4560; Reif, Liturgical Diculties, 99122; idem, Jewish Liturgical Research, 16170; idem, Judaism and Hebrew Prayer, 121, 8895; idem, Jewish LiturgySome Methodological Considerations, 18; and the instructive remarks in Bradshaw, Ten Principles, 1021. 10. T Berakhot 6, 18 (p. 38); and comments in Lieberman, TK, I, 11921. One of the versions recorded in B Menaot 43b substitutes slave for ignoramous ( .)See also Wieder, On the Blessings Gentile-Slave-Woman, 97115; idem, Formation, I, 199218.
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versions of prayers and supplications were in use for some time, with new ones constantly being added and others being eliminated. When the sources themselves speak about competing versions, we are often left wondering what exactly they are referring to. Do they reect varying practices in a given locale or in dierent geographical regions? Or are they chronological distinctions reecting earlier and later periods? Was one practice normative for most Jewish communities and another more localized? In another vein, we might ask whether the plethora of variations reect later stages of development that evolved from a more or less standardized source, as earlier generations of scholars had posited, or perhaps the opposite was the case, namely, that there were initially a plurality of versions, and these underwent a gradual process of unication and standardization. This latter possibility, presented by Baumstark as one of his laws, has been widely accepted in current scholarship.11 Furthermore, Baumstarks second law also seems to apply to the Jewish liturgical contextnamely, that very frequently, though not always, there is a movement from simpler to more elaborate forms in the course of standardization.12 In short, given the piecemeal nature of this evidence, assessing the dynamics of liturgical practice is a formidable task. Let us oer but two illustrations of this fragmentary documentation. Sometimes we are simply uninformed of the halakhic status of a particular prayer. As we shall see below, the evening Amidah prayer was a major subject of halakhic controversy among the sages of Yavneh: Was it to be considered obligatory or optional? We are never informed as to how this particular dispute was resolved. From a series of references to this prayer in the third and fourth centuries, it becomes quite clear that most rabbis assumed that it was a required practice. But because this is never explicitly stated, the de jure status of the evening Amidahas against the de facto practicehas remained anomalous to this day.13 A second example relates to the Qedushah. On the basis of rabbinic literature alone, we would know next to nothing about this prayer; yet other sources seem to indicate that was an important component of Jewish worship.14 How, then, can one explain the silence of rabbinic sources? Was it a matter of indierence, opposition, or is it simply a manifestation of woefully incomplete evidence? Discussion of Jewish liturgy in Late Antiquity is, of necessity, heavily reliant upon the wealth of data preserved in rabbinic literature, yet this material is rife with problems. Beyond the textual issues noted above, there is the question of the degree of acceptance of rabbinic formulations and decisions among the people at large in these centuries. That rabbinic prayer eventually became standardized in Jewish life is well known, but that came about only in the ninth and tenth centuries, under the aegis of the Babylonian geonim,
11. Baumstark, Comparative Liturgy, 1619. 12. Ibid., 1921. 13. For example, the evening Amidah has no formal public repetition, no accompanying Qedushah, and no set time; see Ta-Shma, Evening Prayer, 13144. 14. Chazon, Qedushah Liturgy, 717; E. Eshel, Prayer in Qumran, 32334.
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and in a very supportive social, political, and religious context under Islamic rule.15 What, then, was the situation beforehand, i.e., between the second and seventh centuries? Even if we are inclined to posit some sort of correlation between rabbinic dicta and actual synagogue practice, the questions remain as to whether this was true with each liturgical component, whether it was valid everywhere, and whether it was consistent throughout these centuries. In other words, how authoritative and eective was rabbinic legislation in shaping Jewish liturgical practice in the synagogues of the late Roman and Byzantine periods? To phrase the issue dierently, when the sages supported or opposed a liturgical practice, was their opinion generally implemented, or can we only conclude in such cases that more than one practice existed? As we try to answer these questions, caution must be exercised before accepting the explanations for certain practices per rabbinic literature, and this is certainly true when competing explanations are oered. In these latter cases, there can be no certitude, for the sages themselves were obviously unsure of the matter. One nal issue, which we have addressed on several occasions in this volume, involves the question regarding the earliest evidence of a particular phenomenon in our sources. Does this indicate that something new had crystallized at this time, or is it possible that this phenomenon had existed earlier in one form or another and was only now rst mentioned? Does the absence of explicit references to certain liturgical practices necessarily mean that they did not exist? At times this indeed seems to have been the case. All of the above, of course, are issues that one encounters in every area of historical research; the situation with respect to the study of liturgy is no dierent.
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kai and especially Rabban Gamaliel, the sages at Yavneh (70135) addressed this issue in a variety of ways; their work was continued in subsequent generations, at Usha (ca. 140 80) and in the era of R. Judah I (ca. 180225). Together, this period of approximately 150 years produced the rst clear-cut evidence of a synagogue prayer liturgy, which eventually evolved into what has become normative Jewish worship.
Torah Reading
The one worship element that was carried over from the pre-70 worship context is the Torah reading. It is quite generally agreed that for much of the rst millennium c.e. the regnant Palestinian practice involved a triennial cycle, which, however, was loosely dened and might have varied from one locale to the next in its specic implementation.19 Evidence from the second half of the millennium indicates that a triennial cycle may have been divided into 141, 154, 155,20 167, and possibly even 175 portions.21 The annual Torahreading cycle, associated primarily with Babylonia, is evidenced in late Byzantine Palestine as well, but appears to have been either limited to Babylonian Jews living there or reective of a period in which Babylonian customs began making inroads into Palestine.22 Two statements from Late Antiquity relate explicitly to the Palestinian triennial cycle. One appears in the Bavli: those in the west [i.e., Palestine] who nish reading the Torah in three years. 23 The second is from the Dierences in Customs: Those in the east [Babylonia] celebrate Simat Torah [marking the conclusion of the reading of the Torah] every year, those in Eretz-Israel [celebrate the holiday once] every three and a half years. 24 Despite this rather clear-cut evidence, we are nevertheless ill informed as to precisely how the triennial cycle worked. Several tannaitic statements give us some idea of the many times during the year the regular consecutive reading was suspended:
When the New Moon [Rosh odesh] of Adar falls on the Sabbath, we read Parashat Sheqalim. When it falls in midweek, we move [the reading of Sheqalim] up to the previous [Sabbath]
9b, 11a); B Berakhhot 10b; B Sukkah 49b. See also Aderet, From Destruction to Restoration, 37170; Reif, Judaism and Hebrew Prayer, 95102; Viviano, Study as Worship, passim. 19. See above, Chap. 5. On the Torah reading generally in this period, see Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 12942; Wacholder, Prolegomenon, xviixx; Perrot, Reading of the Bible, 13749; Gilat, Derasha and Reading of the Torah, 26678. 20. Fleischer, Pizmonim of the Anonymus, 3340. See also Esther Rabbah 1, 3. 21. These numbers derive from lists of sedarim found in Genizah manuscripts and early Torah scrolls (Joel, Bible Manuscript, 12629), as well as Tractate Soferim 16, 8 (pp. 29192). On the number 175, see Y Shabbat 16, 1, 15c; Tractate Soferim, op. cit.; and Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 133. Shinan (Sermons, Targums and the Reading from Scriptures, 1012) argues that other variations are reected in midrashic homilies. 22. Fleischer, List of Yearly Holidays, 22372; D. Rosenthal, Annual Torah Reading, 14748. Cf., however, Steinfelds reservations (Qaliris Partition, 26667). See also above, Chap. 5, notes 8991. 23. B Megillah 29b. 24. Dierences in Customs, no. 48 (pp. 17273).
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and suspend [any special reading] on the following Sabbath. On the second [special Sabbath, we read] Zachor [Deut. 25:17]; on the third, the Red Heifer [Num. 19:1]; on the fourth, This month will be to you [Exod. 12:1]; on the fth, we return to the regular order. For all [special occasions] we interrupt [the regular order]: for New Moons, for Hanukkah, and for Purim, for fast days and maamadot, and for Yom Kippur.25
Although the Bavli records a dispute over what the phrase regular order refers tothe reading of the Torah or of the haftarahit seems rather clear that the subject of this mishnah is the Torah reading. Postponing regular readings so frequently would never work out if an annual cycle was being practiced,26 and, indeed, it may have been the Babylonian annual cycle that prompted R. Jeremiah to interpret the above tradition as referring to the haftarah cycle. Another tannaitic tradition, ascribed to R. Simeon b. Elazar, may add two more special Sabbaths, when the regular reading is suspended (at least according to our interpretationsee below):
It [i.e., a tannaitic tradition] has been taught: R. Simeon b. Elazar said: Ezra established for Israel that they should read the curses in Leviticus before Atzeret [i.e., Shavuot], and those of Deuteronomy before Rosh Hashanah. 27
Although this source has been interpreted by Fleischer as evidence for an annual Torahreading cycle in second-century Palestine and by Naeh for a triennial cycle, it seems best explained as adding two further instances of when the triennial Torah reading was to be interrupted.28 To interpret the source otherwise, for example as Fleischer suggests (i.e., a defense for the annual cycle in face of a triennial takeover at the time), is forced. In such a case, this source would stand alone as evidence for a Palestinian annual cycle. Moreover, on the assumption that an annual cycle existed, there would be little reason to make such a statement, no less attribute it to Ezra. Given an annual cycle, these particular portions would have been read as a matter of course at about the same time as the two holidays mentioned (and this is especially true with respect to the Deuteronomy selection before Rosh Hashanah). Thus, on the assumption that an annual cycle existed, it is hard to imagine why R. Simeon would have had to make such a statement, why later generations would have wished to preserve it, and why it required the attribution to Ezra, whom the sages associate with a variety of quite signicant liturgical innovations.29
25. M Megillah 3, 4. 26. According to R. Ami (B Megillah 30b). See Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 13235; Albeck, Mishnah Moed, II, 5012; Lieberman, TK, IV, 1166; and Fleischer, Annual and Triennial Torah Reading, 37. 27. B Megillah 31b. 28. Fleischer, Annual and Triennial Torah Reading, 3840; idem, Inquiries Concerning the Triennial Reading, 4361; Naeh, Torah Reading Cycle, 17980. 29. See the reservations in Bar Ilan, Blessings and Curses, 2935 (and Fleischers rejoinder, Annual and Triennial Torah Reading, 39 n. 38; and, further, Bar Ilan, Interpreting a Baraita, 12634). See also
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Naeh, for his part, suggests that R. Simeon b. Elazars statement was meant to regulate the dierent triennial readings so that they would all conclude together, at the end of each seven-year cycle.30 Thus the special reading in Leviticus was intended for the end of the sixth year of the cycle, and that in Deuteronomy for the end of the seventh. All this is part of Naehs overall theory that the Palestinian triennial cycle of three to three and a half years was based on the seven-year sabbatical cycle and constituted a continuation of the Haqhel ceremony rst noted in Deuteronomy 31.31 While this thesis is indeed intriguing, there are, as might be suspected, several weak links, one of which is the somewhat forced attempt to t R. Simeons statement into the proposed reconstruction.32 With regard to the Torah reading, the Tosefta lls out the picture sketchily drawn by the Mishnah. For example, it adds the haftarot to be recited on special Sabbaths (prior to Passover) and holidays and spells out the Torah readings for the intermediate days of the Passover and Sukkot festivals.33 Of more interest, however, is the fact that the Tosefta also cites alternative Torah-reading customs to those listed in the Mishnah. For Shavuot, for example, instead of the selection from Deut. 16, the custom of reading Exod. 1920 is noted; with regard to Rosh Hashanah, some replaced the reading in Lev. 23 with Gen. 2122.34 The dierence between these alternative practices is far from insignicant, as the contents of each varies greatly; knowing the source and Sitz im Leben of each custhe much later (seventh to eighth centuries) Tractate Soferim 17, 1, 2, and 6 (pp. 297, 298, and 305, respectively), where an annual cycle might also be indicated. For other traditions attributed to Ezra, see Y Megillah 4, 1, 75a; B Bava Qama 82a. 30. Naeh, Torah Reading Cycle, 16787, and especially 17980. 31. To date, no satisfactory explanation has been oered as to why a three to three-and-a-half-year period was used. Although Zunz (Haderashot, 4) once opined in passing that it was connected to a double cycle of seven years, this arrangement has generally been assumed to be somewhat arbitrary; a division of approximately 150 parashot or sections (not including the holidays) may have been viewed as a manageable amount to read on a given Sabbath. Developing Zunzs idea, Naeh has interpreted the various triennial traditions so as to t into a seven-year cycle, suggesting that the overall pattern was to complete two Torah-reading cycles every seven years, thereby continuingmutatis mutandisthe Haqhel ceremony that, according to Deuteronomy, was to take place every seventh year on the holiday of Sukkot (Deut. 31:1013; M Sotah 7, 8). 32. Moreover, his claim that the 141 or 154 division was always used in the rst of the two rounds, and the 167 divisions always in the second, in order to allow maximum exibility for ending at the proper time, is intriguing though speculative. The claim also ignores other divisions attested in our sources (155, 175). There is also the question as to the validity of using these much later medieval attestations of Torah reading divisions with respect to practices many hundreds of years earlier. However, even if one were to accept Naehs theory, there still remains room for much diversity of practice among various Palestinian congregations, although it does assume some sort of overall order and a common conclusion at least every seven years. For a critique of Naehs theory and the latters response, see Sar Shalom, Triennial Torah Reading, 62042; Naeh, On the Triennial Torah Reading, 96110. 33. T Megillah 3, 17 (pp. 35355). 34. Ibid., 3, 56 (p. 354).
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tom would be an enormous aid to understanding the dierent emphases among various second-century congregations. On the one hand, according to the Mishnah and the main tradition cited in the Tosefta, the Torah selections are what we might have expected for special occasions, namely, passages that address these particular holidays. The alternative readings, however, introduced by the phrase Others say, 35 focus on a very dierent type of reading, namely, narrative portions: the revelation on Mt. Sinai in one case and the story of Abraham and his seed in the other. Was this choice based on ideological or polemical considerations, or were these readings simply more appealing and popularly oriented? Regrettably, we have no way of knowing. Tannaitic material knows of other instances of competing customs revolving around the reading of the Torah. For example, R. Aqiva and R. Ishmael dier on the number of people who are to be called to the Torah on Yom Kippur and the Sabbath. R. Ishmael gave preference to the Sabbath by allotting it seven aliyot and Yom Kippur six; R. Aqiva advocated the opposite.36 More important is the dierence of opinion between two secondcentury sages, R. Meir and R. Judah, regarding the weekday Torah readings. According to the former, each reading is to be consecutive. Thus, the reading on Monday morning picks up where the Saturday afternoon Torah reading leaves o, and the readings on Thursday and the following Sabbath follow suit. R. Judah, on the other hand, was of the opinion that the reading on these three occasions should repeat itself, and then on the following Sabbath this same portion would once again be read as well as its continuation.37 The implication of these alternative procedures might well be that dierent synagogues were reading at varying paces and perhaps reading dierent sections of the Torah on any given Sabbath, not to speak of a weekday. It is dicult to say how much the sages had a hand in shaping the Torah-reading service at this stage. Many customs practiced in the second century c.e. undoubtedly originated in the pre-70 era, rendering the sages inuence on synagogue worship unknown (and most likely negligible). Moreover, one is hard put to gauge the degree to which the Mishnah and Tosefta simply recorded common practices or, alternatively, recorded rulings that the sages themselves were making.38
35. This phrase is ambiguous, and rabbinic traditions are both laconic and contradictory; see, for example, Z. Frankel, Darkei Hamishnah, 165 n. 5; Hyman, Sefer Toldot Tanaim Vamoraim, 138; Yashar, and .18083 , My thanks to David Golinkin for these references. 36. T Megillah 3, 11 (p. 356). 37. Ibid., 3, 10 (p. 355); B Megillah 31b. The Mishnah itself (3, 6) simply gives R. Judahs opinion, and, as a result, this has been the normative Jewish practice to the present day. These two sages purportedly disagreed as well on how the Torah blessings should be recitedwith the scroll opened or closed; see B Megillah 32a. 38. A fascinating example of the sages incorporation of earlier Second Temple liturgyboth in terms of actual liturgical passages as well as overall structureinto their prayer format relates to communal fasts; see D. Levine, Temple Prayer, 1028. Another case of the sages shaping earlier practices is re-
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Thus, it is impossible to determine how much change took place in Torah-reading practices during the second century. Most relevant traditions are anonymous (in sharp distinction to the prayer component; see below), and most pericopae seem to describe known practices, without much deliberation regarding change, tension, or conict. We may therefore assume that the customs noted were widespread, arousing relatively little controversy and relating not only to rabbinic circles but to the community at large (at least in Palestine).
The Amidah
The rabbinic role in the shaping of the Torah-reading ceremony may have been minimal, but this was not the case in the second major area of Jewish liturgy: communal prayer. The role of the sages in formulating the prayer liturgy is clearer, although there is no gainsaying that even greater clarity would have been welcomed. The key prayer formulated at this time was the Amidah. Ironically, only a lone statement refers explicitly to this component: ( : Our sages taught: Simeon Hapaquli arranged eighteen benedictions before Rabban Gamaliel according to [their] order at Yavneh).39 Most scholars have assumed that Simeons task involved some sort of editing or reworking of already existing material that had been in use in one form or another in the pre-70 Judaean synagogue. What is unclear, and indeed has been debated throughout this past century, is whether Simeons work at Yavneh was basically editorial or whether it involved some more creative integration of the contents, patterns, and structure of these prayers. Since there had been a general consensus that public prayer existed before 70, it was assumed that Simeons task, under Gamaliels aegis, involved (re)arranging earlier material, perhaps adding some elements, and then editing the nal product. On the one hand, various suggestions have been made regarding traces of these earlier strata of the Amidah in a plethora of biblical and Second Temple sources, from Psalms and Nehemiah
ected in M Megillah 4, 4, and M Taanit 4, 3. In the former source, they clearly ruled that at least three verses must be read for each aliyah. Yet the procedure noted in the latter source for the week of the maamad ceremony quite clearly reects pre-70 practice (see above, Chap. 2) and does not require this number of verses. Only eight verses were prescribed for two days during that week. Either fewer than three verses were read for each aliyah or fewer than three people were called up. Regarding the latter instance, see above, Chap. 2. In either case, the practice advocated by the tannaim was dierent, and later rabbis had diculty explaining the discrepancy. See Wacholder, Prolegomenon, xviiixix. On the issue of short Torah readings (fewer than three verses), see Sperber, Note on the Palestinian Division, 11920. Another instance of rabbinic adaptation of Temple practices is the blessing for the Torah taken from the high priests Yom Kippur blessings; see M Yoma 7, 1; T Kippurim 3, 18 (p. 247). 39. B Berakhot 28b; B Megillah 17b; Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 40:32 (p. 790). This prayer is referred to by three names: (1) Eighteen Benedictions (Shemoneh Esreh); (2) The Prayer (Hatellah); (3) The Standing Prayer (HaAmidah). On the importance of standing during prayer, see Ehrlich, When You Pray, 3850.
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through Ben Sira, the Psalms of Solomon, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and nally, to rabbinic traditions ascribed to the pre-70 era.40 On the other hand, several scholars have suggested that the catalyst for the formulation of this prayer stemmed from Hellenistic sources: Baer claims to have found a Greek parallel to many of the themes in the Amidah, and Bickerman points to Hellenistic civic prayers that resemble paragraphs in Ben Sira and the later Amidah.41 Few scholars, however, had ever questioned the assumption that public prayer in the synagogue existed before 70. During the last decades of the twentieth century, this consensus has been shaken by a series of polar positions on the subject. A minimalist approach has been advocated by N. Cohen, who claims that the editorial work carried out by Simeon Hapaquli at Yavneh was virtually nil because the word in the above statement should be understood as set forth or recite (and not edit or organize); i.e., Simeon simply recited these prayers before Rabban Gamaliel.42 Cohen thus severely restricts the contribution of the Yavnean sages to the crystallization of the Amidah, assuming instead that it had already developed into the central Jewish prayer before 70. This view is somewhat similar to that already expressed by Alon, Blidstein, and M. Z. Fox, who view the primary achievement of Yavneh as one of redening a known communal prayer as obligatory for individuals as well.43 In the late 1980s and early 1990s, three scholars adopted a radically dierent view than that of N. Cohen and others. Fleischer, who maintains that no organized communal Jewish prayer existed prior to 70, claims that the institution of xed public communal prayer, as well as compulsory prayer for the individual, were conceived and created ex nihilo by Rabban Gamaliel and his colleagues in Yavneh; he refers to this eort as, perhaps, the most important and far-reaching enactment in Jewish history.44 At about the same time that Fleischer made his views known, Zahavy published several articles and a monograph, also claiming that Jewish prayer, as it is rst encountered in the Mishnah and Tosefta, was the creation of the Yavnean sages. However, Zahavy goes one step further in attempting to identify the distinct groups that contributed to this enter40. See above, Chap. 5; and, inter alia, Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 2134; Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 26669; Heinemann, Prayer, 2124; Petuchowski, Liturgy of the Synagogue, 51. Of late, a somewhat speculative attempt has been made to date the Amidah to the pre-70 period on the assumption that many of its central themes (resurrection, Jerusalem, and minim) are best explained in a Second Temple context; see Instone-Brewer, Eighteen Benedictions, 2544. 41. Baer, Israel among the Nations, 3236; Bickerman, Civic Prayer, 16385. 42. N. Cohen, Nature of Shimon Hapekulis Act, 54755. 43. Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 26771; Blidstein, Between Individual and Communal Prayer, 256; M. Z. Fox, Responses, 170. See also Heinemann, Prayer, 1517; idem, Studies, 17172. 44. Fleischer, On the Beginnings of Obligatory Jewish Prayer, 42641 (quote on p. 426); idem, Shemone Esre, 179223. For a summary and critique of Fleischers theory, see Langer, Revisiting Early Rabbinic Liturgy, 17994, and the ensuing exchange between Fleischer (On the Origins of the Amidah, 38084) and Langer (Consideration of Method, 38487).
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prise and whose ideologies are incorporated into the xed prayers established in Yavneh: according to him, both the Amidah and the Shema and its blessings were products of the priestly and scribal classes, respectively.45 Finally, Kugelmass adopted a similar position, namely, that the Amidah was fashioned by the post-70 sages. Noting that the destruction of the Temple constituted a major turning point in Jewish history, he interprets the Amidah as a guilt-laden admission that they [i.e., the JewsL. L.] had recklessly abandoned the stipulations of the covenant that are expressed so vividly in the Shema that precedes it. 46 Recent eorts notwithstanding, it appears that, in trying to fathom a complex reality in light of admittedly diuse pieces of information, scholars may be making overly sharp distinctions and, in the process, reaching too one-sided conclusions. It is therefore most refreshing, in the midst of this recent spate of studies that tend to stake out rather unilateral positions, that Reif has charted a more balanced and nuanced historical approach. Reckoning with the rich mosaic in public and private expressions of prayer in the rst century c.e., Reif points to the delicate balance between variety and uniformity as well as between continuity and creativity in the evolution of Jewish prayer from the Second Temple to the tannaitic eras.47 Thus, what is called for is an approach that takes into account not only the primary data that bear on the subject, but also the ostensibly contradictory claims for the existence of pre-70 communal prayer on the one hand and the purportedly far-reaching measures adopted in Yavneh on the other. An attempt to synthesize such data is not merely a question of amalgamating the evidence in some sort of all-inclusive framework; the views promulgated, in their present formulation, are clearly irreconcilable. However, recognizing the valid points in each of the approaches may enable us to integrate them into a plausible theory. What, then, are these basic points of reference? On the one hand, there is no question that public prayer existed in pre-70 Judaea, but, as we have seen, the known examples are restricted to very specic circles.48 Such was the case at Qumran, in the morning service of the priests in the Jerusalem Temple, perhaps among the Pharisees on Sabbaths
45. Zahavy, Three Stages, 23365; idem, Politics of Piety, 4268; and esp. idem, Studies in Jewish Prayer. See also idem, New Approach, 4560. The above-noted theories of N. Cohen and Zahavy (on Fleischer, see below) are engaging but unconvincing. Cohen has no proof that such a prayer existed largely in its present form in Second Temple Judaea, even though her understanding of the word is conceivable, though far from compelling. Zahavys theory, on the other hand, is an articial distinction with no basis in the sources. There is simply no clear evidence of scribal or priestly activity having functioned thusly in Yavneh, nor is the hypothetical connection between such groups and the content of these prayers at all persuasive. One could just as easily make a case for the priestly origins of the Shema, since these paragraphs were recited daily by priests in the Jerusalem Temple (M Tamid 5, 1). 46. Kugelmass, Jewish Liturgy, 289301. 47. Reif, Judaism and Hebrew Prayer, 5387. 48. See above, Chap. 5.
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and holidays, and among the Therapeutae of Egypt and in the Diaspora proseuche.49 On the other hand, it is equally clear that regular obligatory public prayer (as distinct from prayers recited at times in public) did not exist in the ordinary community synagogue of pre-70 Judaeawhether it be in Jerusalem or the Galilee, or whether we base ourselves on Josephus, rabbinic literature, the New Testament, or archaeological nds. Moreover, the sages of Yavneh did not work in a vacuum. The similarities between earlier Jewish literature and many motifs, sequences of ideas, and even overall structure in certain sections of the Amidah make it crystal clear that the rabbis (or, should we say, Simeon Hapaquli) drew on a reservoir of earlier traditions and practices. Adopting phrases and ideas borrowed from scriptural verses (Neh. 9 or Ps. 103:26), perhaps from earlier Pharisaic practice (e.g., the dispute between Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai),50 or from Ben Sira was not a problem for the Yavnean sages. Interestingly, however, not all of the traditions that may have constituted potential sources for the Amidah stem from settings or groups that the rabbis would necessarily have wished to emulate. The priestly liturgy from the Temple and Qumran are cases in point.51 How some of these ideas and formulations reached Yavneh is impossible to determine, though the fact that so many threads of dierent origins appear to have been interwoven is intriguing. It is reminiscent of the selection of very diverse books for inclusion in the Bible at various stages, or of the appearance of so many contradictory opinions side by side in R. Judahs Mishnah. Thus, we can safely assume that there was a great deal of continuity in the themes and formulations of early Jewish liturgy if we understand that this innovative corpus crystallized as a result of rabbis drawing signicantly from earlier literary and non-literary traditions. Nevertheless, there is little question that something very new (for Palestine, at least) was developing in Yavneh as a result of the new circumstances and historical exigencies of the post-destruction period. However, it would be wholly gratuitous to assume that Rabban Gamaliels initiatives brought about a sudden and total revolution by creating ex nihilo an obligatory prayer liturgy for individuals and community alike. It is most improbable that the prayers discussed by the rabbis took shape all at once or that they immediately became the normative practice among Jews. We will argue below that the creation of an obligatory daily worship framework in Yavneh was a dramatic initiative that required decades, even centuries, of development until it reached some sort of nal form and acceptance. On what basis can one claim, then, that a major breakthrough in the development of
49. See Philos Contemplative Life. 50. T Berakhot 3, 13 (p. 15); T Rosh Hashanah 2, 17 (pp. 32021); but see below, note 80. On the various theories regarding the origin of the Amidah, see above, Chap. 5. 51. On the liturgical elements from Qumran, see Weinfeld, Traces of Kedushat Yozer, 1526; idem, Prayers for Knowledge, 186200; idem, Heavenly Praise, 42737; idem, Morning Prayers, 48194; Schiman, Dead Sea Scrolls and the Early History, 3348; idem, Reclaiming, 29297; Nitzan, Qumran Prayer, passim; Elior, Temple and Chariot, 174211.
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Jewish worship came in the post-70 period? Let us review the evidence underpinning this conclusion. Two sources attest explicitly to the innovative activity at Yavneh. The rst is the abovequoted statement about Rabban Gamaliel and Simeon Hapaquli. It must be noted, however, that the rabbinic sources themselves have preserved conicting traditions on this subject.52 Thus, after reporting on Simeon Hapaqulis achievement, the Bavli questions the originality of that achievement, citing an alternative tradition claiming that the exact same task was carried out centuries earlier by 120 elders.53 The response to this claim is revealing; after a digression, the Talmud rearms that Simeons achievement was still revolutionary, for what had once existed had been completely forgotten, and Hapaquli restored the earlier formulation. The second source deals with a dispute between Rabban Gamaliel and other Yavnean sages regarding which components of the Amidah, if any, ought to be considered xed:
Rabban Gamaliel says: One must recite the Shemoneh Esreh [i.e., the Amidah] daily; R. Joshua says: [It suces to recite] a shortened Shemoneh Esreh [ .] R. Aqiva says: If one knows the prayer well [ 45,] he should recite the [entire] Shemoneh Esreh; if not, a shortened Shemoneh Esreh. R. Eliezer says: One who makes his prayer xed [,] his prayer is no longer a supplication. 55
The range of ideas reected in this source is wide. Rabban Gamaliel wished to institute a full recitation of the Amidahs eighteen blessings, with set themes and a xed order. R. Joshua advocated a shortened version of the above. What precisely he had in mind is unclear. The fact that, over a century later, sages had diering opinions regarding what was meant by a shortened Shemoneh Esreh indicates the inherent ambiguity.56 R. Aqiva took a middle-of-the-road approach: recitation of a complete or shortened version should be dependent upon the knowledge of the particular individual.57 R. Eliezer, however, adopted a radically dierent position, opposing any imposition of a set framework.58 The statement attributed to him juxtaposes two dierent, and seem52. See, for example, SifreDeuteronomy 343 (pp. 39495); Y Berakhot 7, 4, 11c; B Berakhot 26b, 33a. 53. B Megillah 17b. 54. Following the evidence in MSS Kaufman, Parma, Cambridge, and others. 55. M Berakhot 4, 34a. 56. See below, note 142. 57. On R. Aqivas statement, see Naeh, Creates the Fruit of Lips, 20613. 58. M Berakhot 4, 4a. Interpreting R. Eliezers statement in conjunction with the previous mishnah was rst suggested by R. Yehosef Ashkenazi, in his commentary Melekhet Shelomo, loc. cit., and commented on by Lieberman, in TK, I, 3132. Another statement by R. Eliezer reects this same view as well: Whenever you pray, know before Whom you stand (B Berakhot 28b). See also the story of R. Eliezers two students who led the prayer service; one was criticized for being too brief ( ,)the other for being long-winded ( .)R. Eliezers reputed defense of his students was: there is a time to be brief and there is a time to be expansive
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ingly contradictory, elements: xed prayer and prayer as a supplication. According to his view, the two do not mix. True prayer requires spontaneity, and any attempt at regimentation is self-defeating. This view is articulated by another Yavnean sage, R. Simeon b. Netanel, a student of R. Yoanan b. Zakkai, who is quoted as saying: And when you pray, do not make your prayers xed, but rather [a plea for mercies and] supplications before God. 59 Thus, from Rabban Gamaliel on the one hand to R. Eliezer and R. Simeon on the other, and taking into account the two middle positions, we nd a wide spectrum of attitudes regarding this innovation, and little consensus appears to have existed at this juncture. In addition to the above two sources, a number of discussions about prayers held by Rabban Gamaliel and his colleagues are best understood in light of the fact that the institution of obligatory prayer had been introduced only recently. These discussions appear to be attempts to implement the new framework and its details. Here are some examples, beginning with the probably more reliable tannaitic sources and then citing the more problematic amoraic ones: (1) The disagreement between Rabban Gamaliel and his colleagues over the primacy of the public or private recitation of the Amidah seems to reect an early stage in the Amidahs history. Rabban Gamaliel claimed that the prayer leaders rendition was the crucial recitation, while the sages claimed that the decisive component was the individuals prayer and the leaders recitation was intended only for those unable to pray on their own.60 (2) The additional Amidah (Mussaf ) appears to have had a rather unusual status at this early stage. R. Eliezer b. Azariah claimed that it should be recited only in an ocial communal framework (i.e., in the presence of ever ha-ir). Other sages disagreed, saying this prayer should be recited anywhere. R. Judah oered a third alternative: whenever it is said by ever ha-ir, individuals in the same locale are exempt from saying it.61 Once again, an early stage in the introduction of an obligatory Amidah seems the most logical backdrop for the ambiguous status of the Mussaf Amidah; details still had to be fully worked out. (3) The third-century R. Joshua b. Levi (or, in a parallel tradition: the sages) oers the
(Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Beshala, 1 [p. 155]). See also the anonymous statement in M Menaot 13, 11, with regard to sacrices: Whether one brings much (i.e., a costly sacrice) or little (i.e., a modest one), what is important is that a person thinks of [God in] heaven. 59. M Avot 2, 13 (or 18). 60. M Rosh Hashanah 4, 9; and esp. T Rosh Hashanah 2, 18 (p. 321). See also the comments in Blidstein, Sheliach Tzibbur, 6977. The dierence between Rabban Gamaliel and his colleagues parallels the contrasting emphases in pagan and Christian prayer; the former tended to be public and spoken aloud, the latter private and personal (per Matt. 6:6). 61. M Berakhot 4, 7. ever ha-ir seems to have disappeared by the third century. It is rarely mentioned in material relating to the amoraic period, and R. Yoanan explicitly says that it did not exist in Sepphoris in his day (Y Berakhot 4, 6, 8c).
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explanation that the thrice-daily recitation of the Amidah was intended as a substitute for sacricial worship in the Temple. This view attests to an amoraic tradition that communal prayer was created in response to the Temples destruction, i.e., soon after the event itself.62 Moreover, the tannaitic SifreDeuteronomy explicitly compares prayer (i.e., the Amidah) to sacrices; just as the latter are referred to as worship (avodah), so, too, are the former.63 Perhaps this view of the Amidah is likewise based on the assumption that this prayer served as a substitute for sacrices, once again pointing to a date not long after 70 for its creation.64 (4) The dramatic dispute recorded in both the Yerushalmi and the Bavli between Rabban Gamaliel and R. Joshua, which led to the formers temporary deposition, is also a case in point. The issue was whether the evening Amidah should be considered obligatory 65 and may perhaps be best explained as having arisen in the context of deliberations over setting a xed liturgy. The morning and afternoon prayers were less of an issue, as they were regarded as substitutes for Temple sacrices and were thus obligatory. However, in view of the fact that there was no evening sacrice, the question naturally arose as to its obligatory nature, even though the precedent of praying three times a day was already known from biblical traditions.66 (5) Another disagreement between Yavnean sages, this time R. Eliezer, R. Joshua, and the sages, over the relationship between personal petitions and the regular Amidah, is also best explained as the kind of issue that would surface in the course of standardizing the Amidah: It was taught: R. Eliezer says: One should rst pray for his own needs and then pray [i.e., recite the Amidah]. . . . But R. Joshua says: One should rst pray [i.e., recite the Amidah] and then ask for his own needs. . . . And the sages say: Neither according to the one or the other; rather, one should ask for his personal needs in the [Amidah] benediction Who hears prayer. 67 Thus, the two named sages agreed that the Amidah and
62. Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7b; B Berakhot 26b. Other suggestions link the Amidah with (1) the biblical patriarchsGenesis Rabbah 68, 9 (pp. 77880); 69, 4 (p. 793); Y Berakhot 4, 3, 8a; Y Taanit 2, 2, 65c; Midrash Hagadol, Genesis 28:13 (p. 505); and (2) Ps. 29T Berakhot 3, 25 (pp. 1718). For further explanations, see Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 40:32 (p. 789); Midrash on Psalms 19, 22 (p. 82b). 63. SifreDeuteronomy 41 (p. 88). 64. Alternatively, this statement might be interpreted as reecting a pre-70 setting, emphasizing the importance of prayer even while sacrices were still being oered. See Acts 3:1. The account of the second-century R. Eliezer ismah learning how to lead public prayers is as fascinating as it is problematic. The story appears in a later midrash (Leviticus Rabbah 23, 4 [pp. 53132]) and is clearly etiological in character. Thus, its historical value for the second century is considerably mitigated. 65. B Berakhot 27b28a; Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7cd; Y Taanit 4, 1, 67d; and the analysis in Goldenberg, Deposition of Rabban Gamaliel, 16790. 66. Ps. 55:18; Dan. 6:11. See Ta-Shma, Evening Prayer, 13144. 67. B Avodah Zarah 7b8a. See also Blidstein, Between Individual and Communal Prayer, 257 61. The emphasis on more spontaneous, personal prayer is related to the issue of kavanah ( ,loosely understood as xed attention or intent) in prayer, about which the rabbis were quite concerned. See the
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prayers for personal needs should be said but not mixed; they disagreed, however, about the proper order: R. Eliezer preferred beginning with the personal supplication and ending with the Amidah; R. Joshua, the opposite.68 The sages, however, carved out a dierent course, advocating that the two elements be combined: the personal requests should be integrated into the last petitionary blessing of the Amidahs middle section.69 (6) Rabban Gamaliel is reported to have approached Samuel Haqatan, requesting him to compose a special prayer, or to reformulate an existing one, that would curse informers and sectarians.70 Presumably, with the framework of the Amidah now in place, the absence of such a reference was noted, and Rabban Gamaliel directed a member of his circle to deal with this issue. Assuming such a revolutionary agenda on the part of Rabban Gamaliel regarding public prayer is consistent with what we know of this man and his vigorous leadership.71 Moreover, this would not be the only instance in which he and his colleagues demonstrated an active and creative posture in liturgical matters. Two other instances of such activity come to mind. The rst concerns Passover. Together with his Yavnean colleagues, Rabban Gamaliel appears to have been largely responsible for creating the basis of the Haggadah for the Passover seder ritual. Little of what appears in the seder liturgy as reected in the last chapters of Mishnah and Tosefta Pesaim or in the Passover Haggadah (which was redacted much later)72 is known to have existed prior to the year 70. An analysis of the above-noted sources indicates that the Yavnean sages were the ones who gave shape and substance to this domestic liturgy, which was created to ll the void resulting from the destruction of the Temple.73 The Passover celebration in the Second Temple period had been intimately connected with the paschal sacrice, which was eaten in a family setting either within the Temple precincts or elsewhere in Jerusalem. With the Temples destrucstatement of R. Meir, The validity of the words depends on the intent of the heart (B Berakhot 15a); as well as Kadushin, Rabbinic Mind, 21214; Heschel, Quest for God, 1114. 68. There is no necessary contradiction between this source, in which R. Eliezer accepts the institution of the Amidah, and the earlier tradition cited (above, note 55), where he objects to a xed version. Perhaps R. Eliezers objection was not to reciting the Amidah per se, but rather to the degree of standardization that Rabban Gamaliel advocated. 69. An anonymous tradition in T Berakhot 3, 6 (p. 13) agrees with R. Joshua: No words [of praise and supplication; see Lieberman, TK, I, 31] should be said after the True and certain blessing [i.e., ;] but one may recite such words after the Amidah, even as much as the Yom Kippur confession. 70. B Berakhot 28b. On the problematic historicity of this attribution, see Kimelman, Birkat HaMinim, 22644; Hirshman, Shmuel ha-Katan, 16572. 71. See Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 119322; Goodblatt, Monarchic Principle, 176231. 72. On the later redaction of the Haggadah, see L. A. Homan, Canonization, 1023; Goldschmidt, Passover Haggadah, passim. 73. See Alon, Jews in Their Land, I, 26265 and esp. n. 32; S. Stein, Inuence of Symposia Literature, 1344. See also Bokser, Origins of the Seder, 67100.
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tion, a vacuum was created in this regard, and the Yavnean sages aimed to ll it by implementing a newly conceived liturgy, several parts of which were known from before but now underwent extensive expansion and developmentas, in many ways, was the case with the Amidah. The second instance of Yavnean liturgical creativity is evident in the High Holiday prayers, which also appear to have been crafted under rabbinic auspices. Little is known about a Rosh Hashanah ceremony in the pre-70 period, while the entire ritual on Yom Kippur revolved around the Temple cult and the high priest. The core of the rabbinic High Holiday liturgy was in the Mussaf Amidah, where the themes of kingship, remembrance, and shofarot (i.e., redemption) are highlighted. There is every reason to believe that the latter two themes were known earlier and even functioned liturgically in certain Jewish contexts. Since the fast-day ceremonies described in Mishnah and Tosefta Taanit reect Second Temple practice, we have clear-cut evidence for the themes of remembrance and redemption in an early period.74 These same two themes appear elsewhere in Second Temple sources. Jubilees knows of the remembrance theme associated both with the rst day of the seventh month and the gure of Noah (thus anticipating later rabbinic High Holiday liturgy), and Philo emphasizes the redemption motif when discussing Rosh Hashanah.75 The Yavnean sages incorporated these themes into their High Holiday liturgy, adding the third component, kingship, to form a trilogy.76 On the basis of the above evidence, there can be little doubt that the obligatory daily Amidah prayerboth personal and communalwas rst implemented in the post-70 period under the auspices of Rabban Gamaliel. However, as noted, these prayers were not created ex nihilo. There were many precedents, and the Yavnean tannaim incorporated earlier materials,77 reworking, reformulating, and structuring them so as to fashion a prayer that would be obligatory for Jews everywhere, as a community and as individuals. Yet, the prayer formulas of the Amidah and Shema benedictions (on the latter, see below) that began in Yavneh were not etched in stone, as has been recognized for generations, receiving particular emphasis in the writings of Heinemann. As regards the Amidah, for example, what was promulgated in Yavneh involved the overall framework, sequential topics, and the number of blessings.78 These elements continued to be eshed out
74. M Taanit 2, 34; T Taanit 1, 913; and D. Levine, Temple Prayer, 95112. 75. Jubilees 6:2331; Philo, Special Laws 2, 18892. 76. In this we follow the opinion of Finkelstein (Development of the Amidah, 1718; idem, Akiba, 312), Gilat (R. Eliezer ben Hyrcanus, 28486), and Heinemann, in his early writings (the Hebrew version of his Prayer, 6162; Formula Melekh ha-olam, 17779; Studies, 55 n. 6); and esp. Kimelman (Again Blessing Formulae). This would go hand in hand with the suggested addition of the word king () to benedictions in the post-70 era. In support of an earlier, Second Temple origin of the kingship motif, see Bchler, Types of Jewish Palestinian Piety, 241.; Heinemann, Studies, 4453; idem, Prayer, 9495. 77. See Blenkinsopp, Second Temple as House of Prayer, 10922. 78. Heinemann, Prayer, 2330.
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in coming generations; the Tosefta oers a number of examples of competing themes that should be amalgamated, thus indicating that various combinations of prayers were still being recited: One should incorporate [the reference to] heretics [ ]in [the blessing about] sectarians [ ,]proselytes in [the blessing relating to] elders, and David in He Who builds Jerusalem. 79 Before concluding this discussion of the Amidah prayer, several important caveats ought be noted. First of all, for all the innovation of the Yavnean generation of sages, it should be remembered that what has been discussed in these sources was the daily prayer the Shemoneh Esreh, or eighteen benedictions. In terms of the Pharisaic-rabbinic tradition, the Sabbath and holiday Amidah may have already been known and practiced by Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai in the rst century c.e., although the tradition attesting to this is rather problematic.80 If, however, its historicity is granted, at least within their own
79. T Berakhot 3, 25 (pp. 1718). See also Shinan, Synagogues, 14344. Toward the end of the third century, R. Abbahu, in the name of R. Elazar, denes the proper place in the High Holiday liturgy for the inclusion of a certain prayer (Y Rosh Hashanah 4, 6, 59c). Regarding the internal logic of the Amidah, most scholars have adopted Maimonides distinction of praise-request-thanks (Laws of Prayer 1, 2 and 4); cf., however, Kimelman, Daily Amidah, 16597, and the bibliography cited therein. 80. T Rosh Hashanah 2, 17 (p. 320): When the New Year holiday falls on the Sabbath, Bet Shammai says, One is to recite ten [blessings in the Amidah], and Bet Hillel says, One is to recite nine. When a festival falls on the Sabbath, Bet Shammai says: One is to recite eight, and [the blessing] of the Sabbath is to be said separately, and that for the festival separately, and one begins with that of the Sabbath. And [conversely] Bet Hillel says: One is to recite seven, and begins with the Sabbath and ends with the Sabbath, and says the Sanctication of the Day in the middle. Bet Hillel said to Bet Shammai: And was it not in the presence of all of you, Elders of Bet Shammai, that oni Haqatan went down [i.e., led the Amidah] and said seven [blessings, i.e., thus following our opinion], and everyone there [lit., all the people] said to him: You did well [lit., you should be satised]? Bet Shammai said to them [Bet Hillel]: It was a time when one should have been brief. Bet Hillel said to them: If indeed it was a time to be brief, he [oni Haqatan] should have abbreviated all of the blessings (and not have omitted one blessing, which then would have followed your opinion). See also T Berakhot 3, 13 (p. 15); and comments in Lieberman, TK, I, 41; V, 106263; Neusner, Rabbinic Traditions, II, 18182. On the one hand, the case for the historical reliability of the above tradition rests on the following considerations: (1) the dispute is clearly attributed to Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai; (2) it is highlighted by the repartee between the two schools; and (3) the reference is to a specic event involving the main issue under discussion. On the other hand, there is no attestation to this tradition: (1) it is quoted anonymously, and the only sage mentioned is R. Judah I (ca. 200 c.e.), at the end of the Berakhot version (oni Haqatan does not appear in this context); (2) the exchange between the two schools is very likely a late addition; (3) no similar discussion involving liturgical issues is ever noted for Pharisaic circles in the pre-70 era; (4) the questions addressed (Sabbath, holiday, and High Holiday Amidah, blessings, Sanctication of the Day, descending to lead in prayer) are issues and terms which gure prominently only in second-century c.e. tannaitic discussions and later (see above, note 76); and (5) as J. N. Epstein has shown, in several instances, disputes or opinions of Yavnean sages (e.g., R. Joshua and R. Eliezer) were recast and attributed to Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai (Introduction to Tannaitic Literature, 6061). See also
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Pharisaic-rabbinic circles, then we may conclude that Rabban Gamaliel and his colleagues applied a known practice to the weekdaya not-insignicant move, yet, at the same time, not entirely revolutionary. Nevertheless, vis--vis Jewish society generally, these Yavnean sages were taking a giant step in obligating every Jew to recite weekday prayers, and this certainly meant (although it admittedly is never stated explicitly) Sabbath and holiday prayers as well. Secondly, much of the discussion in Mishnah Berakhot deals with the obligation of prayer, regardless of where it was carried out. Very little is said of prayer in a public setting. One might, therefore, gain the impression that the worship setting was irrelevant or superuous. It is only in other sources that the importance and centrality of public prayer are emphasized.81
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Assuming the veracity of this mishnaic tradition (as do most scholars),86 it is evident that the sages consciously reworked this Temple-prayer unit, transforming it into an integral part of the daily prayer ritual they were promoting. The three Pentateuchal paragraphs retained their centrality, although why precisely these three passages had been selected in the rst place and why they were presented in this particular order is not clear.87 No fully satisfactory explanation has been oered thus far. According to the Mishnah (in the name of R. Joshua b. Qora), the relationship between the three paragraphs is both ideological and technical. The link between the rst two paragraphs is ideological: a person rst accepts the belief in Gods sovereignty and then the obligation to fulll His commandments. The tie between the second and third is more technical in nature: the second paragraph deals with commandments relevant to both day and night, the third only to daytime commandments.88 Another tannaitic view, of a more functional order, is put forward by R. Simeon b. Yoai: rst comes study, then teaching, and nally doing.89 A widely accepted view today is that the three blessings preceding and following the Shema focus on the three basic themes of creation, revelation, and redemption, and it has even been suggested that the three biblical paragraphs may be understood in this light as well.90
86. For a skeptical view regarding the reliability of this tradition, see Fleischer, On the Beginnings of Obligatory Jewish Prayer, 42021. However, this reservation is dicult to accept as the ceremony described is quite dierent from what we know of the second century c.e. How and why such a description would be invented is dicult to imagine. 87. It is not even clear whether all three paragraphs were selected at the same time. The Nash papyrus preserves only the rst two sentences of the Shema (Deut. 6:45) in addition to the Decalogue (an apparent composite of the Exodus and Deuteronomy versions); see M. Z. Segal, Nash Papyrus, 2736. Moreover, there is no way of knowing whether this papyrus reects liturgical practice; perhaps it was intended for inclusion in a mezuzah or tellin or as a classroom exercise. Cf. Fleischer, Eretz-Israel Prayer, 259 n. 1. 88. M Berakhot 2, 2; B Berakhot 14b. Nevertheless, M Berakhot 1, 5, seems to indicate that the third paragraph was related to the Exodus, or redemption, theme. See the rationale of descending importance oered by R. Simeon Bar Yoai in SifreNumbers 115 (p. 126). See also Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, Baodesh 6 (pp. 22223); B Berakhot 14b. Maimonides (Laws of Torah Reading 1, 2), on the other hand, suggests that the third paragraph (Num. 15:3841) is intended to serve as a reminder to fulll all the commandments (via the fringes noted therein), a suggestion that makes a great deal of sense. We would add, from a literary point of view, that this section concludes with verse 41, which is very reminiscent of the opening of the Decalogue (Exod. 20:2; Deut. 5:6). Perhaps for this reason as well it was chosen to conclude the four-part series of Torah selections. See also the comments of Levenson, Sinai and Zion, 8086. 89. SifreNumbers 115 (p. 126); B Berakhot 14b. For a later attempt to explain the logic in the choice and order of these three paragraphs, see Maimonides, Yad HaazaqaLaws of Reciting the Shema 1, 2. 90. Heinemann, Prayer, 3336; Petuchowski, Liturgy of the Synagogue, 49; Heinemann and Petuchowski, Literature of the Synagogue, 1521; and Rotenstreich, Jewish Philosophy, 186215; and especially Kimelman, ema and Its Blessings, 7386; idem, Case for Creation, Revelation, and Redemption, 17092; idem, Shema and Its Rhetoric, 11156, now superseded by his Shema Liturgy, 9105. Kimelman recognizes the threefold theme of the Shema unit, although he asserts that all are subservient to, and
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
89. Nash Papyrus containing part of the Ten Commandments and the Shema.
Building on the Temple liturgy described in Mishnah Tamid, the sages then added a second blessing before the Shema (and possibly changed the content of the rst, which is left undened in this mishnah) while developing the above-noted three concluding themes. Moreover, the Decalogue was eliminatedpossibly by the sages themselves, but of this we cannot be suredespite the fact that the Decalogue-Shema combination appears to have been widely used in the late Second Temple period. They appear together (though not always contiguously), rst in Deuteronomy (56) and then in the Nash papyrus from Hellenistic Egypt (g. 89), in tellin from Qumran, and in the above-noted morning priestly prayer from the Temple.91 The coupling of the Shema and the Decalogue remains enigmatic. Weinfeld opines that they parallel ancient Near Eastern loyalty
invoked only to emphasize, the divine sovereignty theme. For reservations regarding this triad of themes in the accompanying blessings section, see Shinan, Redeemer and Redemption, 6163. For attempts to see these themes as already existent in the biblical passages, and thus as inuencing the selection of the Shema paragraphs, see Liebreich, Impact of Nehemiah 9:537, 22832 (Neh. 9:611); Mirsky, Piyyut, 1117 (Ps. 19). 91. Albright, Biblical Fragment, 14576; Tcherikover et al., CPJ, I, 107 n. 48; Yadin, Tellin from Qumran, 2329; E. P. Sanders, Jewish Law, 6870. On the question whether the Shema and the Decalogue may have been part of early Christian liturgy in Bithynia (Asia Minor), see Kimelman, Note on Weinfelds Grace After Meals, 69596, and literature cited therein.
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oaths and vassal treaties, similar to those found in connection with Nabonidus and Esarhaddon, while Goldstein suggests that they are similar to the oath (sacramentum) taken by a Roman soldier in allegiance to the emperor.92 Although later amoraic explanations attribute the elimination of the Decalogue to an attempt to counter sectarian polemics, the association of the Shema with the Decalogue nevertheless continued in a number of rabbinic expositions, as well as in later Palestinian synagogue traditions.93 The formulation of the three blessings accompanying the Shema was far from xed, either in tannaitic times or later. A number of versions seem to have been in circulation. For example, although the benediction following the Shema focused on redemption, a specic central theme was not xed at the outset, with the result that dierent historical references were being used at the beginning of the third century: He who reads the Shema must mention the Exodus from Egypt in [the paragraph] True and certain. Rabbi [Judah I] says: He must mention [Gods] sovereignty. Others say: He must mention the slaying of the rstborn and the splitting of the sea. 94 Just as the Amidah was to be recited facing Jerusalem in a particular sequence, rst by individuals and then by the prayer leader, so, too, the Shema was to be recited in several unique ways: (1) while standing;95 (2) antiphonally, or responsivelyreferred to in rabbinic literature as . ][ This latter practice is noted in several sources, particularly in the context of a tannaitic discussion about the chanting of the Song of the Sea ( ) by the Israelites eeing Egypt. All the discussants agree that the song itself was recited responsively, but they dier as to how this was done.96 The Tosefta describes the various proposals as follows: the Israelites would repeat Moses words phrase by phrase as would a pupil reciting the Hallel in school (R. Aqiva); the people would repeat the
92. Weinfeld, Deuteronomy, 35254; Goldstein, I Maccabees, 133 n. 171. Kohler (Origins of the Synagogue and the Church, 5657), focusing on the Shema passage alone (Deut. 6:4), suggests that it was used as a protest against Persian dualism. See also Weinfeld, Uniqueness of the Decalogue, 2734. 93. B Berakhot 12a; Y Berakhot 1, 5, 3c; and Ginzberg, Commentary, I, 16667; Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, II, 13435. See also Kimelman, Shema Liturgy, 6880; idem, Shema and the Amidah, 110. For later rabbinic references, see Y Megillah 3, 8, 74b; 4, 2, 75a; as well as comments in Urbach, Role of the Ten Commandments, 18289; Vermes, Decalogue and the Minim, 23240. On the Decalogue in early Christianity, see R. M. Grant, Decalogue, 117; and, in later Jewish tradition, Fleischer, Eretz-Israel Prayer, 25974. The elimination of the Decalogue may have something to do with internal Jewish polemics; see Yalqut Shimoni, Numbers, 752 (p. 327). 94. T Berakhot 2, 1 (p. 6); Y Berakhot 1, 6, 3d; Exodus Rabbah 22, 3. For other examples of variant customs practiced at this time, see T Berakhot 1, 5 (p. 3). 95. Dierences in Customs, no. 1 (pp. 9194). See also Ginzberg, Commentary, I, 14647; Zimmer, Tenuot u-Tenuot bishat Qeriat Shema, 34449. 96. Bacher, Lexpression ;201001 , Elbogen, Studies in Jewish Liturgy, 58799, 229 34; idem, Jewish Liturgy, 24, 392 n. 24; Finkelstein, Meaning of the Word ;604783 ,)1( ibid. (2), 2948; Fleischer, Towards a Clarication of Poreis al Shema, 13344; Knohl, Parasha Concerned with Accepting the Kingdom of Heaven, 1115; Kimelman, Shema Liturgy, 6368, 9297. Cf., however, Kohler, Origins of the Synagogue and the Church, 58.
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opening refrain each time as would one reciting the Hallel in the synagogue (R. Elazar, son of R. Yosi the Galilean); they would respond as would the people reciting the Shema in the synagogue, where the congregation and prayer leader recite alternate verses, or parts thereof, aloud (R. Nehemiah).97 To complicate matters, however, the Bavli describes these views dierently from the Tosefta, particularly with regard to the Shema analogy: R. Nehemiah is of the opinion that the recitation of the Song of the Sea was like that of a teacher reciting the Shema in the synagogue (with his pupils)he begins and they reply after him. The Talmud understands this to mean that after reciting the opening section of the Shema (including its blessings?) responsively, everything else is said in unison.98 Thus, much remains unclear. How many of these paragraphs were recited responsively we do not knowonly the rst verse, i.e., the Shema, itself? the entire rst paragraph? all three biblical sections? Or perhaps the entire Shema liturgy? 99 Furthermore, it is not clear how the recitation was to be carried outresponsively verse by verse or by half verses, or perhaps with the congregation repeating what the reader said. Nor is it clear whether this responsive recitation was intended for Sabbaths and holidays only (as seems likely) or for weekdays as well.100
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Given the signicant eorts and innovations over these generations, it would seem that many aspects of the prayer service, and not only the Amidah, remained rather uid in many respects. The structure of the special additions to the High Holiday liturgy remained a subject of controversy throughout this period, and these dierences might not have been just local but regional as well.103 Even the status of Rosh Hashanah as a one- or two-day holiday seems to have been an issue, and there may have been varying customs in this regard in dierent locales or at dierent times.104 At some point in the course of the second century, there appears to have been a move toward combining the Shema and Amidah into one prayer service in both morning and evening.105 Here, however, the sages made a clear-cut distinction. They were willing to consider the recitation of the morning Shema in the synagogue as fullling ones obligation of saying it upon awaking (see Deut. 6:7), and as a result they joined the recitation of the Shema and the Amidah.106 This, however, was not true with regard to the evening Shema, which was to be recited upon retiring, and it was only in the third-century that R. Yoanan took the further step, and required that the evening Shema also be combined with the Amidah (see below). The contours of synagogue liturgy as it evolved in the second century may well be reected in several tannaitic sources that speak of those liturgical elements requiring a quorum of ten men, a minyan. The Mishnah says the following: We do not recite the Shema [responsively], nor [have the prayer leader] pass before the ark [i.e., recite the Amidah], nor [have the priests] lift their hands [in blessing], nor read the Torah, nor recite the haftarah . . . with fewer than ten. 107 One baraita expands on this list in a somewhat dierent vein:
As was taught [in the Mishnah]: We do not recite the Shema responsively with fewer than ten men [present]. If we begin with ten and some leave, one completes [the recitation]. We do not recite the Amidah publicly with fewer than ten; if we begin with ten and some leave, one completes [the Amidah]. We do not recite the priestly blessing with less than ten; if we begin [with ten] and some leave, one completes [the benediction]. We do not read the Torah
103. T Rosh Hashanah 2, 11 (pp. 31617); Y Rosh Hashanah 4, 6, 59c. 104. One day: M Megillah 3, 5; T Megillah 3, 6 (p. 354); B Megillah 31a; Tractate Soferim 17, 5 (p. 302). Two days: M Eruvin 3, 79; Y Eruvin 3, 8, 21c. See Zeitlin, Rise and Fall of the Judaean State, I, 236 37; idem, Second Day of Rosh Ha-Shanah, 32629; Petuchowski, Liturgy of the Synagogue, 5354; as well as the interchange between Fleischer (List of Yearly Holidays, 24953; idem, Concerning the Celebration of Rosh Hashana, 29395) and Herr (Matters of Palestinian Halakha, 7680; idem, More on Two Days of Rosh Hashanah, 14243). 105. See Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 2015. On the theme of redemption that could unite these two units, see Kimelman, Literary Structure, 21416. 106. Y Berakhot 1, 1, 2a. 107. M Megillah 4, 3. See also Tractate Soferim 10, 6 (pp. 21214); Yalqut Shimoni, Leviticus, 643 (p. 700).
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Thus, by the end of the second century, the rabbinic Sabbath and holiday liturgy seems to have featured ve elements, three of which occurred daily, one weekly, and one several times a week. The Shema, Amidah, and priestly blessing (included as part of the Amidah but singled out owing to its uniqueness and importance) constituted the basic liturgical framework, with the Torah reading supplementing this basic ritual twice on the Sabbath (morning and afternoon) and once on Monday and Thursday. Reading the haftarah was a Sabbath and holiday addition. Elsewhere in the Mishnah, a similar listing appears, minus the reading of Scriptures, which was dealt with in previous and subsequent paragraphs. The following mishnah seems to imply that one could often fulll all the above functions at any one service: He who recites the passage from the Prophets leads in the recitation of the Shema and leads the congregation in the Amidah, and raises his hands [in blessing]. 109 To these lists we should add prayers such as the Hallel for holidays as well as private penitential prayers, which, in rabbinic circles at least, appear to have been fairly widespread.110 Moreover, there were a number of short responses that were used in the liturgy, although we cannot be sure of their precise context. SifreDeuteronomy lists a number of these. Following the formal call to prayer, Praise the Lord Who is Blessed [ ,] the congregation responded, Praised is the Blessed Lord forever [ ;] Amen was said after every benediction; Blessed be the name of His glorious kingdom forever [ ] was recited, presumably following the opening verse of the Shema; some said, May His great name be praised [ ,] and others responded, Forever and ever [111.] The former praise [May His great name . . .], which eventually became the central re-
108. Y Megillah 4, 4, 75a. Pesiqta Rabbati 40 (p. 167b) adds one further element: When one arises, he immediately goes to the synagogue and recites the Shema, the Amidah, listens to the Torah, and listens to the elder [preach]. 109. M Megillah 4, 5. See also Tractate Soferim 14, 410, where the maftir (i.e., the one who recites the prophetic passages) also leads the Torah-service liturgy and, according to some, even part of the morning service. What is most unusual in the mishnaic listing is the reference to the priestly benediction. Since only priests could oer this blessing, either this mishnah assumes that priests usually led the prayers, or the intent here is that the prayer leader would recite the priestly benediction along with the priest. Elbogen interprets this source as indicating that one capable of doing one thing can do the others as well, an interesting but not particularly convincing interpretation (Studies in Jewish Liturgy, 599). 110. See above, note 102. On private prayers, see Y Berakhot 1, 5, 3d; B Berakhot 16b17a, 60b; see also T Berakhot 3, 56 (pp. 1213); and comments in Lieberman, TK, I, 29, 31. 111. SifreDeuteronomy 306 (p. 342).
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frain in the Qaddish prayer, is reported in the Bavli in connection with the second-century R. Yosi (b. alafta) as being regularly recited in synagogues and academies.112
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Torah and haftarah seem to have been translated into the vernacular whenever necessary.117 Even were we to assume that second-century rabbinic sources correlate with contemporary synagogue ritual, it is not at all clear who was ultimately responsible for these practices. As with the Torah-reading ceremony, were the rabbis reacting to some generally observed practices, or were these developments, in fact, rabbinic initiatives in an as yet uncharted sea? An example of rabbinic involvement in a well-known second-century communal setting may be reected in the fast-day ceremony depicted in Mishnah Taanit. The events described appear to have been popular in nature, with no particular rabbinic involvement or authorization required. Fast-day ceremonies were universal in dierent cultures, and not a few practices described in the Mishnah are strikingly reminiscent of other peoples and places.118 The prayers as described were led not by a sage ( ,)but by an elder and one used to functioning in this manner [911 .] Moreover, tannaitic sources make mention of synagogues or synagogue practices that were outside the rabbinic purview. On several occasions, the Mishnah protests synagogue practices that, in rabbinic eyes, were aesthetically unbecoming or religiously problematic. Forms of dress, deviant liturgical formulations, and the shape and use of tellin are among the issues criticized by the sages.120 Presumably, these practices were serious and widespread enough to evoke rabbinic responses and to be mentioned in the Mishnah. Even within rabbinic circles, diering practices might become a source of friction and irritation. Several second-century Galilean sages, R. alafta and R. anania b. Teradion, adopted one or more fast-day practices that oended their colleagues.121 Finally, the negative references to synagogues of ammei ha-aretz and to their habit of calling the Torah ark by its Aramaic name ( )and the synagogue itself a community center (lit., house of people ) point to the existence of (many?) places and persons who oended rabbinic sensibilities.122
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ticularly the Qumran scrolls, these scholars drew most of their analogies from rabbinic literature. Sharing the same basic assumption as those who specialized in the study of Jewish liturgy, they assumed that the prayers nding expression in rabbinic literature existed well before the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 and thus served as the background, and in many cases the source of inspiration, for Christian liturgical initiatives in the rst century.123 While there can be little question that Jewish liturgical patterns of the rst century c.e. were indeed a powerful inuence on the edgling Christian community, in light of the above remarks we can posit that this did not include the unique rabbinic prayer forms that appear in tannaitic literature. Use of the Amidah, as crystallized at Yavneh and in subsequent generations, to explain rst-century Christian prayer formulas, would be anachronistic. Thus, any reference to early synagogue prayer (in contrast to that of the Temple or Qumran, for example), the Torah reading, or sermons evidenced in rabbinic literature in order to explain Christian liturgy in the New Testament era is, at the very least, problematic and, at most, entirely unjustied.124 Our proposed reconstruction of the early development of synagogue prayer in the late rst and second centuries, which eventually found its way into synagogue liturgy, has led to a very dierent point of reference. It would seem that both Christians and sages developed new forms of liturgical expression in light of the dramatic events of the rst century. Christians were responding to the divinity of Jesus, his passion, and resurrection, with all the theological ramications associated with these events as expounded by Paul and others in the mid rst century c.e. The Jews, for their part, were reacting to the Temples destruction. Thus, not only did Christian worship stem from a very dierent religious, social, and political context than Jewish worship, but it probably began at least a generation earlier. Thus, our needs would be better served were we to focus on the parallel development of Christian and rabbinic prayer modes in the realization that both ultimately derivedat least in partfrom Second Temple worship and ritual congurations.125 Common roots should probably be assumed for the appearance of similar phenomena in the rst centuries, and only secondarily should we assume any sort of direct borrowing of one tradition from another, except perhaps in the case of Jewish Christians or groups such as the Quartodecimans.126 Use of Scriptures, sermons, the benedictions ( ,)and biblical and
123. Oesterley, Jewish Background, 111236; Dugmore, Inuence of the Synagogue, passim; Gavin, Jewish Antecedents, passim; Bouley, From Freedom to Formula, 1328, 3336. Cf., however, Bradshaw, Origins of the Daily Oce, 111; idem, Search for the Origins, 129; idem, Daily Prayer, passim. 124. See in this regard Fiensy, Prayers Alleged to Be Jewish, passim; Bradshaw, Search for the Origins, 3055. 125. Beckwith, Jewish Background, 6880. 126. See the provocative and engaging studies by Yuval (Haggadah, 528) and Liebes (Mazmia Qeren Yeshua, 31348). On Christian worship in early second-century Asia Minor as reected in a letter of Pliny, see van Beeck, Worship of Christians, 12131.
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other hymns containing the sanctus (see below) were well established in parts of Second Temple Jewish society, and thus it is not surprising to nd these forms well entrenched in Christian and rabbinic traditions from the outset. A striking parallel between Christian and rabbinic liturgy in these rst centuries is the degree of public prayers extemporaneity and spontaneity. At rst, many of these prayers were regularly improvised following a few very loose guidelines. In the Christian tradition this phenomenon is most understandable, given the fact that Jesus prayer was largely private, and thus there were no xed liturgical precedents on which Christian communities could base their services. Moreover, since the liturgy was rst articulated in churches that were created through the missionary activity of itinerants preaching the gospel, oral tradition played a decisive role in shaping the earliest forms of Christian prayers, with few xed patterns in evidence. We may conclude, therefore, that the New Testament provides ample evidence that many prayer elements of primitive Christian worship were marked by spontaneity and freedom of expression though their origins are often to be found in the forms and spirit of Jewish prayer. Fully liberated by the example, person and the saving mystery of Christ their Lord, impelled by the Spirit and their new faith, the followers of Jesus christianized what they borrowed from the past. They did not shatter the old models, but according to the spirit or even in keeping with the generic framework of the models, Christians freely constructed the stu of their own worship as it grew and developed. 127 The central Christian prayer, the Eucharist, is an instructive example of a liturgical rite evolving from a largely spontaneous prayer into one with a number of xed formulas in the course of the rst four to ve centuries c.e. 128 The Eucharist was originally an integral part of the agape meal and not an independent liturgical unit. By all indications, the blessings over bread and wine were said at dierent points during the meal. Moreover, originating in a house setting, the early Eucharist did not require or acquire a xed formula, for it was geared to domestic celebration only. By the second century, however, Justin attests that the Eucharist had become detached from its original supper assembly, taking on the form of an independent worship unit recited over bread and wine. Nevertheless, it was still performed in a largely free and extemporaneous manner.129 In the third century, Hippolytus Apostolic Tradition and the Disdascalia Apostolorum report on a much more expansive Eucharist; together, these sources appear to reect a prayer conguration that was widespread in both Rome and the East. Here, too, no xed prayer formula is in evidence. However, owing to Hippolytus stature, his anaphoric for-
127. Bouley, From Freedom to Formula, 87. 128. See the comprehensive study in Mazza, Origins of Eucharist Prayer, as well as Bradshaw, Search for the Origins, 13160; Jones, New Testament, 184209; and Spinks, Sanctus, 57121. 129. Justin, First Apology 65, 67, and possibly also Didache 910, if indeed a Eucharist setting was intended.
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mulation was eventually to have a major impact on written texts in subsequent generations.130 Quasten and others viewed the Apostolic Tradition as a watershed in moving from improvisation to xed formula.131 In the fourth century, with the rapid expansion of Christianity, the amount of extant liturgical material burgeoned. As the church became public and prominent, so, too, did Christian worship become more rened and structured. The Eucharist liturgy had become much less uid, and written anaphoras were linked to it and other rituals, giving rise to prayer settings in the West and East (including the seven known liturgical traditions in the latter) with similar formulasyet with signicant regional dierences.132 Thus, the similarities between early Christian and Jewish (i.e., rabbinic) liturgies in the second and third centuries are apparent. First of all, the process of formalizing these new liturgies was gradual. Both drew heavily on earlier Jewish liturgical traditions and biblical texts, both featured scriptural readings and expositions, both invoked praise, petition, thanksgiving, and doxologies 133 in their prayers, and both regarded the Sabbath as a focal institution. Spontaneity and improvisation with generally accepted guidelines existed side by side. Over the course of time, however, when circumstances warranted it, regional and local dierences surfaced. This is what happened during the enormous growth of the church from the fourth century on, and this is what began to appear in Jewish liturgy with the emergence of a second rabbinic center in Babylonia.
LATE ANTIQUITY
Our knowledge of Jewish liturgy increases immeasurably in Late Antiquity, for which a much larger and more variegated array of sources becomes available, not only from within rabbinic circles as before, but from other sources as well. The Yerushalmi and Bavli elaborate on the Mishnah and Tosefta, and amoraic midrashim, almost exclusively aggadic in nature, continue where their tannaitic predecessors (which were far more focused on halakhic issues) left o. Even within rabbinic literature itself, we can detect traces of liturgical poetry, which some sages seem to have been inclined to produce. This expanded agenda not only reects rabbinic literary proclivities, but also seems to indicate an enhanced rabbinic response to the external needs of the contemporary Jewish commu130. Jones et al., Apostolic Tradition, 8789; Cobb, Apostolic Tradition, 21316. 131. Quasten, Patrology, II, 189; Jungmann, Early Liturgy, 5273; Cuming, Eucharist, 3951. Cf., however, Willis, History of Early Roman Liturgy, 916. 132. Baldovin, Christian Worship, 16572; Bouley, From Freedom to Formula, 159253; Bradshaw, Search for the Origins, 16184. 133. On the Christian side, see Didache 910; Origen, Contra Celsum 8, 34; 1 Clement 59, 34; and the Didascalia Apostolorum 9, 25 (p. 86): instead of the sacrices which then were, oer now prayers and petitions and thanksgivings. See also Dix, Shape of Liturgy, 21418; Oesterley, Jewish Background, 130 47; Baldovin, Christian Worship, 15765.
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nity. A shift in intellectual-religious endeavors would appeal to a wider public. A statement by the third-century R. Isaac is most revealing in this regard: Once, when money was available, a person would want to study mishnah and talmud. Now, when there is no money, and especially when we suer from [foreign rule ( ,]) a person prefers to study Scriptures and aggadah. 134 It may not be coincidental, therefore, that Late Antiquity witnessed increased rabbinic activity in the synagogue: rabbis delivered public sermons and, later, compiled midrashic material into literary corpora. There were a number of signicant and dramatic developments in Jewish communal worship in Late Antiquity. On one level, there was the continued crystallization and amplication of the basic communal liturgical frameworks created earlier. The cluster of blessings and prayers around the Shema and the Amidah was further rened, and new components were added, either to the body of these prayers or as prefatory and concluding sections. At the same time, an entirely new liturgical genrethe piyyutmade its appearance in Byzantine Palestine, stemming from circles not necessarily identical with the sages. By the end of the fourth century, the Palestinian sages were no longer heard of as a denable group, and it is not clear whatif anyrole their successors played on the religious and social landscape during the fth to seventh centuries. As noted above (Chap. 15), there is a signicant amount of evidence that priests played an important role in the creation and recital of piyyutim. Another group that was active in Palestine and seems to have had some connection with the liturgical practices of the time were the mystics, whose traditions, taking form some time between the fourth and seventh centuries, are recorded in the Hekhalot literature. At any rate, by the third century, a number of rabbis had become more involved in communal life generally, and in the synagogue in particular, opening numerous lines of communication between them and the people at large.135 A by-product of this increased involvement may well have been that, on the one hand, the sages were more responsive to congregational needs and proclivities while, on the other, the community was more sympathetic to rabbinic opinion, thus enabling rabbinic liturgical traditions to impact more readily on their lives. With the emergence of a second center in Babylonia, rabbinic forms of worship evolved there as well, aording an opportunity to compare and contrast these developments with those of Palestine. Tannaitic initiatives now proceed to evolve and consolidate along parallel tracks, with some striking instances of the accommodation of liturgical practices to local conditions and of the adoption of varying forms due to dierent historical contexts. In speaking of liturgy in general, Baumstark makes the following re134. PRK 12, 3 (p. 205); see also Song of Songs Rabbah 2, 5, 1. 135. L. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 2342, 98133; idem, Sages and the Synagogue, 20122; and above, Chap. 13.
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mark, which is applicable to our subject as well: It seems to be of the nature of Liturgy to relate itself to the concrete situations of times and places. No sooner had the vast liturgical domains come into being than they began to be divided up into smaller territories whose several forms of worship were adapted to local needs. 136
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odesh), and he is quoted in several contradictory traditions as to when private prayers could be introduced into the Amidah, if at all.143 Regarding the Sabbath, these sages disagreed as to whether the Mussaf Amidah should be innovative: Rav required it, Samuel did not.144 They each advocated a dierent order of benedictions for Qiddush and Havdalah on a festival following the Sabbath.145 Rav is noted as being particularly active regarding the High Holiday liturgy, indicating several expressions of sovereignty that should be incorporated (the king of justice, the holy king), suggesting several additions to the Mussaf service, and arguably composing the Alenu ( )prayer.146 Both Rav and Samuel composed confessional prayers for Yom Kippur.147 They also addressed the timing of the two kinds of prayer for rainwhen mention should rst be made and when the formal request should commence.148 Finally, Rav declared that any benediction that did not include the name of God was not valid.149 Whether Rav or Samuel was indeed responsible for the actual composition of at least some of the prayers noted above is a moot issue. Perhaps in many instances they were simply taking note of already existing prayers or practices. Nevertheless, we can assume with a great measure of probability that most earlier traditions were brought to Babylonia from Palestine by this generation of sages, if not by Rav and Samuel themselves. These sages also addressed several Torah-reading issues, although far less extensively and usually in connection with the matters discussed in the Mishnah. They disagreed, for example, on which reading was appropriate for Shabbat Sheqalim and which Sabbath should be designated Shabbat Zakhor, if Purim falls on a Friday.150 Assuming that this concentration of source material indeed reects the unusually extensive involvement of these two Babylonian sages in liturgical matters, we might ask why this was so. Both these sages were, in essence, the founders of Babylonian rabbinic tradition, and it was they who in large part transmitted rabbinic culture from Palestine to Babylonia, establishing academies that were to become the foci of rabbinic activity for almost a millennium. Given this pioneering context, it is not at all surprising that they would take the lead in addressing synagogue practices in a place whose communities had heretofore been only minimally aected, if at all, by rabbinic forms and customs. A rst
143. Composing prayer: B Berakhot 16b. Private prayer: B Berakhot 31a; B Avodah Zarah 8a. 144. Y Berakhot 4, 6, 8c. 145. B Pesaim 102b. 146. Kingship: B Berakhot 12b. Mussaf: Leviticus Rabbah 29, 1 (p. 668); PRK 23, 1 (p. 333); Y Rosh Hashanah 1, 3, 57a; Y Avodah Zarah 1, 2, 39c; Tanuma, Haazinu, 4; B Rosh Hashanah 27a. On the Alenu prayer, see Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 7172, 11920, 220; as well as the reservations of Heinemann in his notes to Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 1089 (Hebrew ed.). 147. B Yoma 87b. See Abrahams, Lost Confession, 37785. 148. B Taanit 4b5a, 10a. 149. B Berakhot 40b. 150. B Megillah 29b30a.
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encounter with such local tradition is reected in Ravs introduction to Babylonian synagogue practices with which he was not familiar. In one instance, he was surprised by a particular custom of prostration, in another by the recitation of the Hallel on Rosh odesh, and in a third by nding a statue in a Nehardea synagogue.151 In third-century Palestine, R. Yoanan was far and away the dominant rabbinic personality, and, as might be expected, his comments on the two major components of the prayer liturgy are legion. He is quoted as having addressed all aspects of the Shema and its blessingswhen, where, and how they ought to be recited.152 To the Amidah, R. Yoanan added introductory and concluding verses (Pss. 51:17; 19:15), which are an accepted part of the liturgy to this day.153 He also asserted that every blessing should have a reference to Gods sovereignty ( ,)and commented on the priestly benediction, the Hallel psalms, and quite extensively on the fast-day ritual.154 R. Yoanan rearmed the importance of a minyan of ten for reciting certain parts of the service and oered midrashic support for a minimum of ten verses required for the public recitation of the Torah.155 He also adopted a rather strident position regarding the exclusive use of Hebrew in prayer: The ministering angels pay no attention to whoever makes personal requests in Aramaic, since angels do not recognize Aramaic. 156 Another important opinion associated with R. Yoanan appears in the context of an exchange between him and an older colleague, R. Joshua b. Levi: R. Yoanan has said: Who merits the future world? Whoever adjoins [the prayer for] redemption and the evening Amidah. R. Joshua b. Levi says: The Amidot [to be recited each day] were established to be in the middle [i.e., between the two recitations of the Shema, in the morning and evening]. 157 Clearly, R. Yoanan was trying to establish a new norm linking the Shema with the Amidah, as was already customary in the morning, thus forming a full evening service that would serve as the liturgical focus at the end of the day.158 R. Joshua b. Levi seems to have maintained a more conservative posture, claiming that the evening Shema should be said only upon retiring for the night, which would mean that the three daily Amidot were to be recited between the morning and evening Shema. As noted above, the obligatory nature of the evening Amidah had been a subject of dispute since
151. Prostration: B Megillah 22a. Hallel: B Taanit 28b. Statue: B Rosh Hashanah 24b; B Avodah Zarah 43b. 152. Y Berakhot 2, 3, 4bc; B Berakhot 13b, 14ab, 16a, 24b (= B Rosh Hashanah 34b). 153. B Berakhot 4b, 9b. 154. Sovereignty: B Berakhot 40b. Priestly benediction: B Megillah 24b. Hallel: B Taanit 28b. Fast-day ritual: B Taanit 4b, 14b, 19b, 22b, 29b. 155. Minyan: B Megillah 23b. Torah reading: B Megillah 21b. 156. B Sotah 33a; B Shabbat 12b. See also Yahalom, Angels Do Not Understand Aramaic, 3344. 157. B Berakhot 4b. 158. Already recorded in T Berakhot 1, 2 (pp. 12). See Ta-Shma, Three Issues Relating to Prayer, 55860.
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the days of Rabban Gamaliel; R. Yoanan was advocating its importance and obligatory nature here by linking it with the recital of the Shema. Both R. Yoanan and R. Joshua b. Levi asserted that the proper recitation of prayer was tantamount to oering a sacrice, and the latterin one traditionwent even further by claiming that prayers were established in place of the Temple sacrices.159 Finally, it was Joshua b. Levi who rst determined that all the traditions declared by various tannaim to be the essence of the redemption paragraph following the Shema should be included.160 This policy of preserving alternative traditions as much as possible was followed in other instances as well, particularly when it came to rival Palestinian and Babylonian practices. One way to do this was to divide competing versions between the morning and evening services. Indeed, this is what was eventually done with the two versions of the second blessing before the Shema ( and ,) the two versions of the paragraph following the Shema ( and ,) and, later on, with two paragraphs of the Amidah ( and 161.) When confronted with a series of versions of the silent thanksgiving prayer ( ,) which was recited by the congregation during the readers repetition of the Amidah, R. Pappa declared: Therefore, let us say them all. 162 It is thus not coincidental that it is precisely at this time that we read with far greater frequency of sages remarking about the virtues of reciting prayers in the synagogue.163 By the third and fourth centuries, the synagogue was assuming a more central role in rabbinic circles than ever before. The repeated emphasis on the synagogue and regular attendance may serve as an indication of their support for and identication with the institution, and this, in turn, may mean that the worship conducted there met with their approval. Nevertheless, even here one should exercise caution. The fact that some sages emphasized their approval may well indicate that there were others who had reservations. Not only would it have been natural and understandable for some sages to have shied away from a public forum such as the synagogue, preferring either the intimacy of their homes or the familiarity of the academy, where they spent much of their time, but such behavior is explicitly documented.164
159. B Berakhot 15a, 26b. Cf., however, Y Berakhot 4, 1, 7ab, where this tradition is ascribed to the sages generally, and R. Joshua b. Levi is said to have associated prayers with the biblical patriarchs. See also the discussion in Ginzberg, Commentary, III, 2429. 160. Y Berakhot 1, 6, 3d. 161. See the material, much of which is liturgical, collected in Sperber, Jewish Customs, I, 2935; II, 2375. 162. B Sotah 40a; see also Y Berakhot 1, 5, 3d. 163. See above, Chap. 13. 164. B Berakhot 7b8a; and above, Chap. 13.
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( )
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165. This phenomenon is noted by Baumstark; see above, note 136. 166. Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 3435, 4849. On Liebes theory that the ending of this blessing, Mazmia Qeren Yeshua, is of Jewish-Christian origin dating from the rst century, see his Mazmia Qeren Yeshua, 31348; as well as the comments of Ta-Shma (Liebes, Mazmia Qeren Yeshua [review], 18189) and Kister (Horn of David, 191207), as well as Liebes rejoinders (Responses, 20917). 167. Torah reading: Dierences in Customs, no. 48 (pp. 17273); B Megillah 29b. Additional festival days: Dierences in Customs, no. 41 (pp. 16164); B Megillah 31a; Y Demai 4, 2, 23d; Y Eruvin 3, 9, 21c, and elsewhere. 168. Dierences in Customs, no. 1 (pp. 9194); and R. Yoanans remark in B Berakhot 13b. See also TaShma, Early Ashkenazic Prayer, 91100. 169. Tractate Soferim 13, 9 (pp. 24546). 170. Dierences in Customs, no. 36 (p. 156). 171. Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 210; Shinan, Redeemer and Redemption, 4966.
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172. Dierences in Customs, no. 43 (pp. 16567). 173. Ibid., no. 32 (pp. 15051). 174. Pirqoi ben Baboi, in Ginzberg, Geniza Studies, II, 55556. 175. Dierences in Customs, no. 47 (pp. 16972). This rather strange Palestinian practice apparently stems from the very end of antiquity, when Babylonian customs were beginning to penetrate (and dominate?) Palestine. See Fleischer, Eretz-Israel Prayer, 298300. 176. Dierences in Customs, no. 49 (pp. 17374). 177. Ibid., no. 29 (pp. 14546). 178. Ibid., no. 42 (pp. 16465). 179. Ibid., no. 22 (pp. 13536). Margalioth, in his comments (ibid.), points out that this is the one instance in which later Palestinian practice contradicted not only an explicit mishnaic ruling (Taanit 4, 1), but also what appears to have been an earlier local custom (Y Taanit 4, 1, 67b). Nevertheless, it should be noted that this later Palestinian practice is labeled an alternative custom in T Taanit 3, 1 (p. 336). It is also worth indicating that customs other than the one noted in Dierences in Customs are mentioned with respect to Babylonia (B Taanit 26b). 180. Dierences in Customs, no. 55 (p. 179).
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) In Babylonia, a mourner would enter a synagogue every day; in Palestine, only on the Sabbath.181
Even with regard to the recitation of certain central prayers, there were dierences between Palestine and Babylonia. A controversial instance concerns the third paragraph of the Shema and whether it should be recited at night, when the phrase And you shall see it [referring to the fringes of the tzitzit] could not be fullled. A number of customs developed. In Babylonia, for example, this paragraph was not recited, but if someone nevertheless began it, then it had to be concluded. In Palestine, on the other hand, the rst, but not the latter, part of the paragraph (which mentions the phrase And you shall see) would be read.182 Neither of these positions seems to be in accordance with the Mishnah, which has been understood to mean that the third paragraph () was to be recited at night.183 However, it is unclear whether what is being discussed here is general synagogue procedure or only the customs of rabbinic circles in Late Antiquity. To further complicate matters, it is reported that on coming to Babylonia, R. Abba bar Aa discovered that the custom was routinely to begin and end the paragraph.184 These varying practices appear to have continued for some time. Taking into account some of the above dierences, along with other related phenomena (such as the role of the Exilarch and the Babylonian academies in determining communal life), we may conclude that a recognizable distinction had emerged between a more uid Palestinian practice on the one hand, and a more xed and standardized Babylonian one on the other. All Babylonians concluded the Torah-reading cycle in one year, whereas in Palestine it took anywhere between three and three and a half years, and in some instances, only one year. Thus, in Palestine the length of the reading in various synagogues might dier on any given Sabbath, as would the particular section being read. Moreover, the choice of Prophetic readings (haftarot) often varied among Palestinian communities, in addition, of course, to the languages used by various congregations. When added to the range of Palestinian customs regarding the targum, sermon, and piyyut, this diering religious ambience becomes even more striking.185 To what extent Babylonian practice was indeed homogeneous, and whether the perceived dierence between Babylonia and Palestine depends in large measure on the multifaceted sources available for the latter, is dicult to determine.
181. Ibid., no. 14 (pp. 12223). 182. Y Berakhot 1, 6, 3d. 183. M Berakhot 1, 5. I follow the interpretation of medieval commentators, as against Ginzberg (Commentary, I, 2078) and Lieberman (TK, I, 12), who interpret this mishnah as referring to the third blessing, i.e., that following the three paragraphs of the Shema. 184. Y Berakhot 1, 6, 3d. 185. Shinan, Synagogues, 13637, 152.
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Prayer
A number of Palestinian sages aired reservations about the ever-increasing formalization of prayer. Commenting on R. Eliezers emphasis on spontaneity as a necessary component of prayer (M Berakhot 4, 4), several third- and fourth-century sages commented as follows: R. Abbahu, quoting R. Elazar [b. Pedat], states: [One should pray] so as not to appear to be reading a letter. R. Aa, in the name of R. Yosi, [said]: One must say something new [ ] every day. Aitophel would recite three new prayers each day. 186 Moreover, the Yerushalmi also describes the way in which some sages actually expressed this spontaneity. R. Elazar (b. Pedat) would recite a new prayer () each day, and R. Abbahu a new blessing ( 781.) Other sages sought alternative ways: R. Yoanan would add two verses, one at the beginning and one at the end of the Amidah, while R. Judan would recite both these verses before the Amidah.188 Many amoraim composed individual prayers, usually of a personal supplicatory nature, which they would recite regularly. At rst, such personal appeals seem to have been recited at dierent points in and around the Amidah (see above), but as time went on, there was a tendency to concentrate them at the end of that prayer; at a later stage, a xed liturgy of supplication replaced these individual outpourings. An interesting example of this process may be found in the following: R. Zeira asked R. Yosi: How does one add a new thought to it [the Mussaf Amidah]? He said to him: Even if one says, And may we oer before You our obligatory daily sacrices and the additional [Mussaf ] sacrice, one has fullled the obligation [to add something new]. 189 Thus, what may have originally been a private prayer of R. Yosi eventually became the accepted norm for the Mussaf Amidah; it was subsequently eshed out with a fuller statement regarding the loss of the Temple and the longing to renew its mode of worship. Recently published Genizah material points to a striking distinction between Palestine and Babylonia as regards public prayer. Palestinian liturgy was far more elaborate. Besides containing a large number of poetic embellishments (i.e., piyyutim), it was much more expansive owing to the addition of many benedictions, supplications, biblical verses, and entire psalms. Moreover, Palestinian liturgy was punctuated by a variety of ceremonials, highlighting important moments in the ritual, such as the Torah-reading section.190 A word is in order regarding the elusive subject of synagogue prayer in the Roman Diaspora. As is the case with the pre-70 synagogue, we simply have no concrete evi186. Y Berakhot 4, 4, 8a. 187. Ibid. 188. Ibid. 189. Y Berakhot 4, 7, 8c; see J. Homan, Surprising History of the Musaf Amidah, 4145. 190. See Fleischer, Eretz-Israel Prayer, passim, and esp. Chaps. 3, 4, and 6; Ta-Shma, Early Ashkenazic Prayer, 410.
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dence of what constituted the liturgy in these synagogues. No literary source relates to the liturgical component nor does any inscription seem to reect prayer formulas that might have been used in a public setting. The only clues that we have are from several papyri and certain Christian works, particularly the Apostolic Constitutions, a collection of materials on ecclesiastical law, probably compiled in Syria toward the end of the fourth century. Although the Jewish character of some of the prayers appearing therein (particularly Books 7 and 8) has been recognized for well over a century, this topic has been of late the focus of a series of studies by van der Horst.191 Opinions have ranged far and wide as to what these prayers indeed reect: Hellenistic Judaism, a rabbinic prayer with a Diaspora refraction,192 a Jewish-Christian liturgy, a sectarian or mystical Judaism, or a combination of some of the above. Scholars have been intrigued by the similarities between the prayer in the Apostolic Constitutions (Book VII, 3338) and the rabbinic Sabbath Amidah; how much of the former is of Jewish origin and how much is Christian interpolation are issues discussed by van der Horst, who oers a reconstruction of the original Jewish prayer, which he labels Avoth.193
Qedushah
The complexity of Jewish prayer at this time, the variant customs that may have coexisted, and the fact that not all prayers were rabbinic in origin or even related to in rabbinic literature, are all reected in the Qedushah (sanctication) prayer of Late Antiquity.194 While there can be no question as to the importance of this prayer, its origins and stages of institutionalization in synagogue liturgy nevertheless present intriguing questions. Built around Isa. 6:3 (referred to as the trisagion in Christian liturgy) and Ezek. 3:12, which describe the angelic adoration of God, these verses appear in a variety of contexts and combinations throughout the liturgy, often together with other verses and always in a dierent overall pattern. When fully developed, this imitation of the angelic praise of God was recited in three dierent places in the morning liturgy (and again during the Mussaf service on the Sabbath and festivals), before, during, and after the Amidah: in the rst blessing preceding the Shema, known as the Qedushah of the Cre191. On the Apostolic Constitutions, see Simon, Verus Israel, 5360; Fiensy, Prayers Alleged to Be Jewish, passim; van der Horst, Greek Synagogue Prayers, 1946 (with a rich bibliography as well as a survey of the history of research on this topic). On Papyrus Egerton 2, also dated to the late fourth or early fth century, see Bell and Skeat, Fragments, 141; van der Horst, Neglected Greek Evidence, 27796. Regarding a Hebrew prayer from Byzantine Egypt, see Harding, Hebrew Congregational Prayer, 14547. 192. See van der Horst, Neglected Greek Evidence, 28993. 193. Van der Horst, Greek Synagogue Prayers, 3846. 194. On this prayer generally, see Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 5462; Werner, Doxology, 292307; idem, Sacred Bridge, I, 28291; II, 10826; Heinemann, Prayer, 23033; Bar-Ilan, Basic Issues, 520; Fleischer, Qedusha, 30150; Langer, To Worship God Properly, 188201; Ta-Shma, Early Ashkenazic Prayer, 11014.
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ator ( ; also referred to as the Qedushah while sitting, ;) within the third benediction of the Amidah (referred to as the Qedushah while standing, ;)and toward the end of the service (Qedushah de-Sidra, 591.) A cluster of intriguing problems connected with this prayer relates to where it came from, when it was incorporated into the liturgy, and whether its components were introduced at more or less the same time. Was it originally a Palestinian or a Babylonian innovation, and how widespread did it become in Late Antiquity? Let us examine the evidence at hand. Several major issues relating to the Qedushah involve the question as to which of its various formulations appeared rst in Jewish liturgy, and when this happened. Given the fragmentary nature of our sources, there is little agreement regarding the rst matter: some claim that the Qedushah of the Creator came rst, others that the Qedushah in the Amidah preceded it.196 As for the Qedushah of the Creator, many early medieval orders of prayer, including those of R. Amram and R. Saadiah Gaon (ninth and tenth centuries), do not include it. Moreover, the evidence from Pirqoi ben Baboi (ca. 800 c.e.), a fervent supporter of Babylonian traditions as against Palestinian ones, is noteworthy: Until now the Qedushah and [i.e., together with] the Shema are said in Palestine only on Sabbath and holidays and only in the morning service [Shaarit], with the exception of Jerusalem and all cities where there are Babylonians who pressed [lit., caused controversy and dispute] until they [the Palestinians] took upon themselves [the custom of ] saying the Qedushah daily. But in the other cities and towns of Eretz-Israel, where there are no Babylonians, they only recite the Qedushah on Sabbath and holidays. 197 For many years, this statement led scholars to believe that the entire Qedushah entered the Jewish liturgical framework in the Middle Ages; following P. Blochs pathbreaking study one century ago,198 it was assumed to have originated in contemporary mystical circles. More recent research, however, has pointed unequivocably in another direction. The theme of angelic praise of God was well known in Second Temple sectarian circles, and this motif was integrated into the Qumran liturgy, as the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrice scroll vividly describes.199 Finally, the trisagion verse from Isaiah (Holy, holy, holy . . .6:3) appears in I Enoch and Revelation as well.200
195. The last term, Qedushah de-Sidra, is unclear and may have originally referred to prayers or a study session that preceded it. See B Sotah 49a; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 7071; Sokolo, Dictionary, 36869. 196. See the extensive comment by Heinemann in Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 5961 (Hebrew ed.); Fleischer, Shemone Esre, 21023. 197. See above, note 174. See also Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, VII, 7678. 198. P. Bloch, Die .11503 ,66752 ,4796 ,5281 199. Flusser, Jewish Roots, 3743; Strugnell, Angelic Liturgy, 31845; Newsom, Songs of the Sabbath Sacrice, 2338; Weinfeld, Heavenly Praise, 42737; Schiman, Reclaiming, 35560; Chazon, Qedushah Liturgy, 717; E. Eshel, Prayer in Qumran, 32334. 200. I Enoch 39:1213: Those who do not slumber but stand before your glory, did bless you. They
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In church sources, the sanctus is evidenced by Clement of Rome, Ignatius, Clement of Alexandria, and perhaps also Tertullian.201 The most salient Christian use of the Qedushah verses as an emulation of heavenly angels is found in the Apostolic Constitutions, in which the trisagion appears in a context praising God as creator and redeemer: And the bright host of angels and the intellectual spirits say to Palmoni [Dan. 8:13], There is but one holy being. And the holy seraphim, together with the six-winged cherubim, who sing to Thee their triumphal song, cry out with never-ceasing voices: Holy, Holy, Holy Lord God of hosts, heaven and earth are full of Your glory [Isa. 6:3]. And the other multitudes of the orders, angels, archangels, thrones, dominions, principalities, authorities, and powers cry aloud and say: Blessed be the glory of the Lord out of His place [Ezek. 3:12]. 202 This theme is repeated in several other early Christian liturgies as well.203 Thus, there can be no question that a Qedushah was recited regularly in certain Christian circles, that this practice was inuenced by earlier Jewish tradition, and that it perhaps paralleled contemporary Jewish usage as well.204 Solid evidence for the centrality of the Qedushah in Jewish liturgy of Late Antiquity is found in the piyyut. In these poems, which reect elements of the Sabbath and holiday worship services, the Qedushah is integrated into the Shema and Amidah contexts regularly. Yotzerot and qerovotpiyyutim composed for recitation in the Creator blessing before the Shema and within the Amidah, respectivelyindicate the extent to which the Qedushah was a xed element in the synagogue liturgy. The centrality of the Qedushah in the mystical prayers of Hekhalot literature has long been recognized.205 These traditions seem to have coalesced some time in Late Antiquity, between the fourth and seventh centuries, and not in the Middle Ages as believed earlier.206 The nature of the relationship between Hekhalot prayers and those of rabbinic and synagogue circles has been disputed for some time. Much has been written about the
shall bless, praise, and extol [you], saying, Holy, Holy, Holy Lord of the Spirits; the spirits ll the earth. And at that place [under his wings] my eyes saw others who stood before him sleepless [and] blessed [him], saying, Blessed are You and blessed is the name of the Lord of the Spirits forever and ever (Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, I, 31). See also Rev. 4:811. On Flussers suggestion that the Qedushah is mirrored in the Gloria (Luke 2:14), see his Sanktus und Gloria, 12952, as well as Dan. 7:10. 201. Werner, Sacred Bridge, II, 11516; Weinfeld, Heavenly Praise, 432. 202. Apostolic Constitutions 7, 35; see also ibid., 8, 12. See Fiensy, Prayers Alleged to Be Jewish, 6673, 98 109, 17681. Like Jewish liturgy, Christian liturgy describes the angels as joining mortals in prayer at the time of the Eucharist ceremony; cf. Markus, End of Ancient Christianity, 2122. 203. For other examples, see the liturgies of James and Mark, in A. Roberts et al., Ante-Nicene Fathers, VII, 538, 544, 55253, 557. 204. Taft, Beyond East and West, 17677; Spinks, Sanctus, 57121; Jones et al., Study of Liturgy, passim. 205. See, for example, Fleischer, Diusion of the Qedushot, 25584; Schfer, Synopse, nos. 179, 188; idem, Hekhalot-Studien, 28589; Swartz, Mystical Prayer, s.v. Qedushah. 206. Swartz, Mystical Prayer, 223; Elior, Merkabah Mysticism, 235.
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centrality of prayer in several Hekhalot compositions, and a number of prayers identical or similar to those of the synagogue are recorded in these various traditions. Clearly, some sort of connection existed. Although certain scholars have assumed that these prayers were originally composed by mystics and only later impacted on the synagogue,207 others have suggested precisely the opposite, that mystical circles ourishing in the post-talmudic period adopted some of the prayers known from synagogue contexts and adapted them to t their needs.208 Although the latter approach appears to be more likely, there is no way of knowing for sure. Because there were so many possible channels through which these prayer formulas might have been conveyed to both the synagogue and mystical circles, stretching back many centuries, any suggestion positing a causal relationship between them at this juncture is, at best, mere speculation. In the Hekhalot literature, the angels are said to recite the Qedushah three times a day near the Seat of Glory ( 902.) God occupies this throne while Israel recites its prayers; furthermore, only when the Qedushah is recited in the synagogues and academies by mortal beings do the angels recite this hymn in His honor.210 Thus, for the mystics, synagogue prayer was crucial in bringing God closer to His angelic and mortal (i.e., mystic) admirers. However, in contrast to what seems to have been the accepted Palestinian synagogue practice at the timei.e., that the Qedushah of the Creator was recited only on Sabbaths and holidaysthe mystics said it every day.211 Although the Qedushah was rmly ensconced in the Jewish liturgy of Late Antiquity, little information about this prayer has been preserved in rabbinic literature. It is rst mentioned in the Tosefta, but in a very dierent context from the one we might have expected. In discussing blessings in general, and those associated with the Shema specically, the Tosefta notes the following: And which blessings should commence with Blessed be [ . . . ?]And people should not respond to the one reciting a blessing. R. Judah [mid second century] would respond to one reciting a blessing [by saying,] Holy, holy, holy, etc. and Blessed be, etc. All of these [responses] R. Judah would say
207. See, for example, L. A. Homan, Censoring In and Censoring Out, 1937; Ar. Goldberg, Service of the Heart, 205; Bar-Ilan, Mysteries of Jewish Prayer, 1538, 84140. Also at issue is whether these mystics are to be identied or associated with rabbinic Judaism, or whether they were relatively independent of it. Scholems classic view claiming such a tie ( Jewish Gnosticism, 930) has come under much attack of late, and several alternatives have been suggested, inter alia, the common people (am ha-aretz) or another religious elite, perhaps the priestly class. See, inter alia, Schfer, Hekhalot-Studien, 28995; D. J. Halperin, Faces of the Chariot, 44755; Swartz, Like the Ministering Angels, 16567; Idel, Qedushah and the Observation of the Heavenly Chariot, 715. 208. Swartz, Alay Le-Shabbeah, 17990; idem, Mystical Prayer, 217, as well as 12225; idem, Like the Ministering Angels, 166; Schfer, Jewish Liturgy and Magic, 54453. 209. According to B ullin 91b, there are dierent traditions stating how many times angels recite the Qedushah, from once a day to once in the course of history. 210. Schfer, Synopse, no. 180. 211. See Gruenwald, Song of the Angels, 47576.
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with the one reciting a blessing. 212 Not much can be extrapolated from this brief notation, nor is it clear which blessing is being referred to.213 Does it refer to a synagogue context, and was this just the practice of R. Judah, or did others (sages? the people generally?) follow suit? Did his response consist of these two verses only, or were there others as well? In the rst part of the third century, R. Joshua b. Levi is quoted as saying that if someone comes to the synagogue late and can manage to begin and nish the Amidah before the prayer leader reaches the Qedushah, he is permitted to do so.214 Here we seem to be on more solid ground in assuming that, by this time at least, the Qedushah was part and parcel of the synagogue liturgy, and the reference seems to be to the third benediction of the Amidah. This may also be the case in a fourth-century source regarding an incident from the time of R. Abun:
Batitay [presumably the name of a prayer leader] became silent at [the point when he was about to recite] the And the heavenly creatures [lit., the wheels, the beginning of a sentence in the Qedushah; see Ezek. 1:19]. They went and asked R. Abun [what to do]. R. Abun said to them in the name of R. Joshua b. Levi: He who passes [before the ark] in his stead begins from the point where he [i.e., the former] stopped. And they said to him: But we have learned one starts at the [beginning of the] blessing in which the mistake was made. He then said to them: Since you have already answered with the Qedushah [ ,]it is as if [we are at] the beginning of a benediction [and you may proceed from there]. 215
We are clearly dealing here with the public recitation of a section of the Qedushah. The question arises regarding which Qedushah this is referring to. This story contains a number of contradictory hints. On the one hand, the word wheels ts the Qedushah of the Creator, at least in its later formulation. On the other hand, pass [before the ark] is used exclusively for the Amidah, and thus we are left in a quandaryalthough the latter option appears to be more likely. What we can say is that by Late Antiquity the Qedushah seems to have become an integral part of the morning service. What, then, was the source of this prayer? Clearly, the Qedushah was not a rabbinic creation, to wit, the rabbis never discussed its recitation in any halakhic context. If this prayer indeed originated in non-rabbinic circles, it was presumably the work of Second Temple sectarians such as those at Qumran. Such an assumption might account for the appearance of the Qedushah among Christians, mystics, in piyyutim, and in the synagogue of Late Antiquity. The paucity of references in rabbinic literature seems to indicate the
212. T Berakhot 1, 9 (pp. 34). It is not entirely clear whether R. Judah responded at the same time that the prayer leader recited the blessing (Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 55) or following the blessing, reciting it together with the prayer leader (Lieberman, TK, I, 11). 213. Gruenwald, Song of the Angels, 478. 214. B Berakhot 21b. See Langer, To Worship God Properly, 19293. 215. Y Berakhot 5, 3, 9c. On the custom of worshippers standing on their tiptoes when reciting the Qedushah in imitation of the angels, see Tanuma, Tzav, 13.
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sages lack of enthusiasm over this prayer, perhaps owing to its mystical, sectarian, or Christian associations.
The fullest inscription in this respect, however, was found in the nearby Jericho synagogue:
May they be remembered for good. May their memory be for good. The entire holy congregation, the old and the young, whom the King of the Universe has helped, have contributed and made this mosaic. He who knows their names, their childrens, and [those] of the members of their households will inscribe them in the Book of Life [with all] the righteous. All Israel are brethren [ .] Shalom. Amen.219
Not infrequently, as indicated above, the ending of an inscription was taken from prayers and psalms concluding with Amen or Selah. This practice is particularly pronounced in a series of inscriptions from ammat Gader; two inscriptions conclude with Amen. Amen. Selah, one with Amen. Amen. [Selah]. Shalom, and a fourth with Amen. Selah. Shalom. 220 However, in some cases, more than these individual terms have been adopted; the phraseology of the Jericho inscription is remarkably similar to prayer formulas that emerged much later in Jewish liturgy. As early as 1942, Sukenik and Schwabe pointed out the striking similarities between this inscription (and several Greek ones as well) and the or prayers of the Jewish prayerbook. Weinfeld, Foerster, and Wieder have expanded on this comparison.221 Thus, it may well be that these
216. See above, Chap. 9. 217. See above, Chap. 11. 218. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 64. 219. Ibid., no. 69. For the phrase , see Y agigah 3, 6, 79d; and esp. Wieder, Jericho Inscription, 57279 (= Formation, I, 14148). 220. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, nos. 3235. 221. Sukenik and Schwabe, Ancient Synagogue, 92; Weinfeld, Synagogue Inscriptions, 28895;
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inscriptions echo prayers familiar to the congregation which, although not noted in ancient literary sources, were already in existence in some form and continued to be recited down to our own day.
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custom of reading a total of only three verses. The Yerushalmis explanation for this difference states that in places where there was a targum recitation, only three verses were read; otherwise, the number was twenty-one.226 While the Yerushalmi notes that in the presence of R. Yoanan only three verses of the haftarah were normally recited, the Bavli records ten.227 Tractate Soferim, on the other hand, mentions at least four dierent practices: When are these rules applicable? When there is no translation or homily. But if there is a translator or a preacher, then the maftir reads three, ve, or seven verses [instead of twenty-one] in the Prophets, and that is sucient. 228 Given its lesser sanctity, the haftarah reading was a much more exible component than the Torah reading; verses could be drawn from dierent sections of a book, on dierent subjects, or even from several books.229 Targum. The targum was a widespread practice in the synagogues of Late Antiquity, and certainly in Palestine and Babylonia, for which our information is relatively abundant. However, one opinion in the Yerushalmi records that targumim are not indispensable, but translations, if implemented, must be made properly.230 The Roman-Byzantine Diaspora remains an enigma in this regard, nor do we know whether the Torah was read in Hebrew or Greek in these communities (or if in both languages, then what was the extent of each practice?). Thus, the degree to which a targum was needed remains an open question. After Justinians Novella 146 of 553 c.e., the use of the vernacular apparently increased, but to what extent remains unknown.231 The haftarah was translated along with the Torah reading, but the rabbis were much less stringent about the former.232 The system of translation preserved in rabbinic literature was as follows: A translation must be made orally (although targumic texts seem to have existed) immediately following the Torah reading; the translation is to be made verse by verse with regard to the Torah, but as many as three verses at a time was acceptable for the haftarah. The goal was to render a passage as faithfully as possible, but not too slavishly. As the second-century R. Judah b. Ilai says: He who translates a verse by its plain meaning [ ]is a liar, and he who adds [to it] is a blasphemer. 233
226. Y Megillah 4, 3, 75a. 227. B Megillah 23b. 228. Tractate Soferim 13, 15 (pp. 25051). 229. M Megillah 4, 4; B Megillah 24a. Variations in the selection of haftarot to be read continued throughout the Middle Ages; see D. E. S. Stein, Haftarot of Etz Hayim, 6888. 230. Y Megillah 4, 1, 74d. On the function and signicance of the targum in rabbinic culture, see Fraade, Rabbinic Views, 25386. 231. On this law generally, see Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, no. 66. See also A. Baumgarten, Justinian and the Jews, 3744. 232. M Megillah 4:4; T Megillah 3:1820 (pp. 35859); B Megillah 21b. See also Zevin, in Talmudic Encyclopedia, X, Cols. 2627. 233. T Megillah 3:41 (p. 364); B Qiddushin 49a.
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[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.]
Most Palestinian targumim that have come down to us have a great deal in common and seem to reect, to a greater or lesser degree, a common targumic tradition as well as what was actually delivered in the synagogue setting.234 The various targumim are roughly of the same length, both in relation to one another and in relation to the original Torah reading, thus reecting a balance between the Hebrew and Aramaic renditions.235 The major exception in this regard is Pseudo-Jonathan, which is distinguished by the number of its additions (about six thousand), which are interpolated in the verses and also precede them (g. 90).236 Some are much more than explanatory comments and often incorporate aggadic traditions that expand upon the text, as in midrashim.237 These tar234. Shinan, Embroidered Targum, 2035; idem, Targumic Additions, 13945; idem, Echoes from Ancient Synagogues, 35364; Alexander, Targumim and the Rabbinic Rules, 1428; Bowker, Targums and Rabbinic Literature, 1415; Flesher, Mapping the Synoptic Palestinian Targums, 24753; idem, Targumim in the Context, 62629; as well as McNamara, Targums, 85758, 860. See also M. L. Klein, Geniza Manuscripts, I, xxixxxxiv. 235. Shinan, Targumic Additions, 142. 236. Ibid., 14555; idem, Embroidered Targum, 4660. 237. Shinan, Embroidered Targum, 46103; Alexander, Jewish Aramaic Translations, 22934; Hirschberg, On the Place of Aramaic Targums, 2123.
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gumic additions also refer to popular traditions, daily life and habits, and a wide range of folk beliefs, including witchcraft, superstitions, miracles, angelology, and popular theology (e.g., simple and direct Divine retribution).238 It has been suggested that PseudoJonathan, more than any other targum, is a literary creation in which the editor incorporated the traditions at his disposal into a running commentary of the biblical text.239 At times, as Shinan has pointed out, the editor was guilty of repetition and contradiction in carrying out his massive compilation.240 In this area, too, signicant dierences are evident between Palestine and Babylonia; in the former there is a considerable uctuation in the degree of literalness as well as in the inclination to include additional material, while Babylonias one targumic tradition, Onqelos, is literal and straightforward. Perhaps this is related to the Sitz im Leben of each; the literal targum was geared for the academy, the expansive for the synagogue.241 One particular targumic tradition that has a direct bearing on the synagogue and its art is to be found in Pseudo-Jonathan of Lev. 26:1: Nor shall you place a gured stone in your land for the purpose of prostration, but you may place a stoa [here, a mosaic pavement] impressed with drawings and gures on the oors of your sanctuaries [i.e., the oors of your synagogues], though not to bow down to it [for purposes of worship], for I am the Lord your God. The reality of Byzantine synagogues in Palestine, as we have seen above, is that many featured gural representations, ranging from birds, sh, and humans all the way to zodiac signs and Helios. However, in contrast to the sages, who, at best, took a rather dim view of this phenomenon, the author of the above-noted targumic tradition appears to have come to terms with this widespread, popular development, even granting it the sanction of the Torah.242 Sermon. From our earliest records of synagogue liturgy in the rst century c.e., the sermon, or homily, constituted an integral part of the Torah-reading ceremony.243 For Late Antiquity we have a great deal of material in this regard, both sermons and accounts of actual homiletical settings.244
238. Shinan, Embroidered Targum, 10467; idem, Live Translation, 4547. See also Hayward, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, 17788. 239. See, for example, Maher, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, 26490. 240. Shinan, Targumic Additions, 149. 241. See R. Kasher, Aramaic Targums of the Bible, 7377; idem, Targumic Toseftot, 6264. However, some Palestinian targumim seem to reect both settings, the school and the synagogue; see idem, Aramaic Targumim, 7585. 242. M. L. Klein, Palestinian Targum and Synagogue Mosaics, 3345; Fine, Iconoclasm; R. Kasher, Aramaic Targumim, 7579; and above, Chap. 13. 243. See above, Chap. 5. 244. See Zunz, Haderashot, 16375; Heinemann, Public Sermons, 728; Y. Frankel, Darkei Ha-aggadah, I, 1626. This increase, and shift, in available source material may not be just a matter of dierent types of sources, but, as noted above, of changes in the political, social, economic, and religious climate of
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Though the degree of rabbinic involvement in targumic activity remains unclear, there is little question that a number of sages delivered sermons in synagogues. As we have noted above, rabbinic literature has preserved a number of revealing references in this regard.245 Besides known rabbis, we hear of itinerant preachers who would travel from place to place and address congregations.246 One such preacher, identied simply as a aver, came to a synagogue and, having expounded a scriptural lesson, was accorded respect and material support.247 Sometimes such a transitory arrangement caused temporary embarrassment, for there were many dierent local customs. Thus, when visiting a community, R. anania b. R. Aa had to nd out where the reading for that week began and then quickly improvise a sermon.248 In general, sages were urged to have some teaching material ready at hand, so as to be able to respond spontaneously, and on at least one occasion, a congregation was said to have reacted negatively to such an improvisation.249 Sermons appear to have been delivered from a raised platform so the speaker could be seen more readily, as was the custom among pagan rhetors who spoke in a public setting.250 Since a synagogue audience may have been heterogeneous, including the more learned along with the less sophisticated, preachers were well advised to employ whatever rhetorical talents and techniques were at their disposal in order to gain and hold the entire audiences attention.251 These might include humor, the use of anecdotes, and other ploys.252 R. Judah I, for example, is said to have always waited for the audience to assemble before he made his entrance.253 Another way of engaging the congregation was to ask less important gures, often students, to deliver prefatory remarks; having been given a warm-up,
third-century Palestine and later. These changes seem to have led to a dierent or, at least, additional religious emphasis among the sages vis--vis the general population. This is what seems to be reected in R. Isaacs well-known remark about changing times and the need for aggadah and not halakhah (PRK 12, 3 [p. 205]). See my Rabbinic Class, 2342, 98133. 245. See above, Chap. 13. On a later identication of a preacher as a sage, see Ecclesiastes Rabbah 9, 17. 246. See M Eruvin 3, 5, regarding the redenition of the area covered by an eruv to enable one to hear a visiting sage on the Sabbath. Paul may also have been perceived thusly in Antioch-in-Pisidia (Acts 13:1415). 247. Tanuma, Terumah 1 (p. 45a). On preaching in the Byzantine church, see Cunningham, Preaching and the Community, 2947. 248. Leviticus Rabbah 3, 6 (p. 69). 249. Exodus Rabbah 40, 1; Genesis Rabbah 28, 3 (p. 261). 250. See, for example, Genesis Rabbah 81, 1 (p. 969); Midrash Hagadol, Exodus 35:1 (p. 723). On rhetors as noted by the midrash, see SifreDeuteronomy 343 (p. 394). See also above, Chap. 9. 251. See generally Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine, 4782; and, more specically, Bregman, Darshan, 19; Hirshman, Preacher and His Public, 10816; Mack, Aggadic Midrash, 3856. 252. Humor: Genesis Rabbah 30, 8 (p. 275). See also the statement in PRK 12, 25 (p. 223), where a laughing countenance is associated with aggadah. Other ploys: Lamentations Rabbah 2, 47 (p. 50b). 253. Deuteronomy Rabbah 7, 8. See also ibid., Ki Tavo, 8 (ed. Lieberman, p. 111). Note the two versions: in one, the setting was a synagogue; in the other, an academy.
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the audience was assumed to be primed for the keynote speaker.254 It is unclear whether the setting for such arrangements was the academy or the synagogue, perhaps both. We are told that audiences fell asleep at times, requiring the preacher to display ingenuity in regaining their attention.255 Resh Laqish, in trying to appease the Nasi after a scathing attack on his oce in a public sermon by Yosi of Maon, compares the role of the preacher in the synagogue to that of a theater performer, for whom the entertainment factor is of prime importance.256 In the same vein, Jerome says the following about preachers techniques: The preachers make the people believe that the ctions which they invent are true; and after they have, in theatrical fashion, called forth applause . . . they arrogantly step forward, speak proudly, and usurp the authority of rulers. 257 Sermons were delivered primarily on Sabbaths and holidays and, with rare exception, always in conjunction with the Torah or haftarah reading.258 As early as the rst century, Jesus and Paul were said to have delivered sermons following the reading of the haftarah; in the case of the former at least, the sermon was based on the Prophetic reading.259 Rabbinic literature has preserved a dierent type of sermon: those delivered before the Torah reading and linked with its opening verse.260 This type of sermon might take one of several forms. The most widespread, of which a very large number have been identied to date, is the Petita, in which a preacher begins with a verse far removed from the Torah portion (often from the Writings) and then makes his way from topic to topic through associative reasoning, until nally reaching the opening verse of the Torah reading. In the meantime, he has managed to touch on a variety of themes, and at least part of the audi-
254. Genesis Rabbah 98, 13 (pp. 126162); Y Sukkah 5, 1, 55a. 255. Stories are told of R. Aqiva and R. Judah I in this regard; see Song of Songs Rabbah 1, 15, 3; Yalqut Shimoni, Genesis, 102 (p. 464). Chrysostom has some interesting things to say regarding his churchs audience: Here in church there is great disturbance and confusion, and it is as bad as a tavern. There is so much laughing and tumult, with everyone chattering and making a noise, just as they do at the baths or the market (commenting on I Cor. 36:5, as quoted in Kallistos, Meaning of Divine Liturgy, 1314). 256. Genesis Rabbah 80, 1 (pp. 95053); see also Y Sanhedrin 2, 6, 20cd; Lamentations Rabbah, Proem 17 (p. 14); and Herr, Synagogues and Theatres, 10519. 257. Jerome, In Ezek. 34, 3, as quoted in S. Krauss, Jews in the Works of the Church Fathers, part 1, 234. 258. The only exceptions noted in our sources are the account of R. Meir, who preached on Friday nights (Y Sotah 1, 4, 16d), and a late tradition that speaks of a Saturday afternoon sermon (Midrash on Proverbs 31 [p. 121 and n. 4]; Yalqut Shimoni, Proverbs, 964). On the Babylonian custom of reading the haftarah on the Sabbath of a holiday, following the Minah service, see B Shabbat 24a; and Sperber, Jewish Customs, I, 25; IV, 69. 259. Jesus: Luke 4:1630. Paul: Acts 13:1441. See also Bregman, Triennial Haftarot, 7484. 260. On these and other types of sermons, see Heinemann, Public Sermons, 1124. Compare these types of sermons and the concern for the audience with the remarks of MacMullen regarding Chrysostoms audience (Preachers Audience, 50311).
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ences interest has been held captive by curiosity as they have wondered how the preacher would get to the point everyone knew he must reach.261 A variation of this form, though far less ubiquitous in extant sources, is the Tanuma Yelamdenu type, in which a relatively simple halakhic issue is posed at the beginning (by the preacher, a student, or a member of the congregation). In the course of addressing the issue the preacher must also work his way toward the opening verse of the Torah portion.262 Despite the apparent wealth of midrashic material in the various rabbinic compilations, it is not at all clear whether these texts are rened literary creations by a series of editors or are, in fact, testimony to what was actually said in front of a synagogue (or academy) audience, or something in between. There is much evidence pointing to the careful literary crafting of much of this material, which would seem to indicate that it is more a literary than an oral tradition.263 Thus, it may be that these homilies are more the product of editors organizing earlier traditions (and adding something of their own) than of what actually transpired in the synagogue. Even were we to assume that some of these homilies may have been actual public sermons, it is not at all clear whether they were delivered in an academy (and therefore geared to a relatively closed rabbinic circle) or in a synagogue (i.e., addressed to the wider community).264 Thus, extreme caution ought to be exercised before drawing too hasty an inference as to what was actually said before a synagogue audience in Late Antiquity. As with every aspect of liturgical practice, we must remember that any discussion regarding sermons relates primarily to the Palestinian setting. There is little or no evidence for such rabbinic involvement in the Babylonian or Roman-Byzantine Diaspora. The latter Jewish communities appear to have nurtured customs and practices that had evolved over centuries with no apparent rabbinic input.
Piyyut
The third basic component of Jewish liturgy in the Byzantine era, and the one entirely new element in synagogue worship at the time, was the piyyut. Derived from the Greek , the piyyut was a liturgical poem that was introduced into any one of a
261. Heinemann, Proem, 100122; Mack, Aggadic Midrash, 5769; Shinan, Synagogues, 14043. 262. For example, B Shabbat 30ab. See also Strack and Stemberger, Introduction to Talmud and Midrash, 32933. 263. Bregman, Circular Proems, 3451; Sarason, Petitot, 55765; idem, Toward a New Agendum, 5573; Hirshman, Rivalry of Genius, 2330; Meir, Problem of the Term Midrash, 10310. The assumption that the sermon found in rabbinic literature was rst and foremost a literary creation has been forcefully asserted by Y. Fraenkel; see, for example his Darkhei Haaggadah, I, 43560. 264. Heinemann, Public Sermons, 728. It is interesting to point out in this regard that books of aggadah to which the sages were opposed clearly circulated among the Jews and in the synagogues; see Y Shabbat 16, 1, 15c.
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number of worship frameworks: in the Shema section ( yotzer), in the morning Amidah (qerovah, especially the one featuring the Qedushah, i.e., the qedushta), on Sabbath and festival evening services (shivata), in the Mussaf Amidah, and on special occasions, such as the Avodah service on Yom Kippur and on Tisha bAv.265 Written in Hebrew for the most part, the piyyut draws heavily on biblical and midrashic literature for its rich and often complex poetic presentation. Besides these two major sources, Hekhalot traditions may have played some sort of role in setting the religious, intellectual, and literary framework for the compositions, as the contemporary Christian liturgical tradition certainly did.266 We know very little about who the poets ( paytanim) of these early compositions were or what their social and religious standing was within the communities in which they lived and functioned. In contrast to the belief of earlier generations, who dated the beginnings of piyyut to anytime between the second and ninth centuries, there is a general consensus today that this form of religious expression emerged in Palestine some time during the Byzantine era.267 More controversial, however, is the source of the piyyut form. Many view the piyyut as a continuation of an earlier Jewish religious expression, although here opinions dier as to precisely which one: prayer, midrash, homily, biblical and post-biblical Hebrew poetry, or private supplication.268 Fleischer, who views the piyyut as a strictly internal Jewish development, considers this genre to have been a form of rebellion against xed prayer and a means by which the rabbinically ordained prayer framework could be kept intact while, at the same time, instilling it with creativity and freshness.269 Other scholars assume the importance of the Byzantine setting for the origin of the piyyut, but here, too, there are a variety of suggestions. The traditional explanation, deriving from several twelfth-century sources, is that the piyyut developed as a result of the persecution of Jews, when their regular worship services were prohibited. This form of expression oered a substitute liturgical form for the regular prayers (Samaual b. Yaya
265. For a listing of various types of piyyutim, see Fleischer, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 6776; Heinemann and Petuchowski, Literature of the Synagogue, 21213. 266. P. Bloch, Die ;11503 ,66752 ,4796 ,5281 , Gruenwald, Yannais Piyyutim, 257 77; Yahalom, Piyyu as Poetry, 112. On the Christian context, see below. 267. Fleischer, Studies on the Problems Related to Liturgical Function, 6063; Lerner, Origin of Piyyut, 1334. For an early, second-century dating, see Schirmann, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 12933. On poetic renditions of the Yom Kippur Avodah service that preceded Yosi b. Yosi, see Yahalom, Priestly Palestinian Poetry, 2155; as well as the earlier comments in Roth, Ecclesiasticus, 17178. 268. Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 21925 (prayer, aggadah); Zunz, Literaturgeschichte, 2229 (midrash and targum); Mirsky, Piyyut, 785; idem, Beginnings of Piyyut, 1829 (midrash, Hebrew poetry); Ta-Shma, On the Beginning of Piyyut, 28588 (prayer). See also Yahalom, Priestly Palestinian Poetry, 2130. 269. Fleischer, Studies on the Problems Related to Liturgical Function, 5255; idem, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 4146. Recently Elior (From Earthly Temple to Heavenly Shrines, 21767; Temple and Chariot, 24177), following Gruenwald (Impact of Priestly Traditions), has emphasized the priestly background of Hekhalot traditions. See also Ta-Shma, On the Beginning of Piyyut, 28588.
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al-Magribi) or to replace study ( Judah b. Barzillai al-Barceloni). Often these explanations have been connected with Justinians famous Novella or a Sassanian persecution.270 Over the last few generations, a number of scholars have emphasized the elements common to the piyyut and the poetry of surrounding cultures and have posited the inuence of the latter on the former, in form and possibly also in content (at least in part). When the assumption was that the piyyut stemmed from the Middle Ages, it was thought that Muslim poetry was a decisive factor.271 When it became clear that a Byzantine setting was indicated, Werner argued for a Christian liturgical inuence on Jewish forms.272 Schirmann also recognized the common elements in both, but dating the Jewish evidence quite early, i.e., to the second century c.e., he therefore assumed that Jewish practice inuenced Christian practice, and not the other way around.273 The piyyut focuses on the basic components of the service (the Shema, the Amidah, and especially the Qedushah); in fact, this is a further indication as to what constituted the core public prayer service at the time. It was intended from the outset for public recital by the azzan. We know of no such poetry for private use. Indeed, the silent recitation of the Amidah probably seems to have been retained even when the piyyut replaced the usual oral repetition of the Amidah. It is far from clear what sort of reality lay behind this liturgical phenomenon. For example, how many synagogues would have had such a poetic recitation on any given Sabbath, and how often would this occur in any particular place? While thousands of piyyutim have already been identied, it is not clear how widespread or frequent such recitations were. While Fleischers theory that the early piyyut was intended to replace the public prayer service has often been quoted,274 it is far from clear whether this was always the case (and even so, if the reason was a form of rebellion) or if there might have been dierent concurrent practices. Of more consequence is the issue of comprehension. Even today, when studying the piyyut and utilizing the various apparatuses available, one does not nd it an easy task to understand the language of these poems or their allusions, metaphors, and nuances. If the intended audience was the ordinary synagogue congregant, then comprehension of this genre speaks wonders for the cultural and Hebraic level of the typical Jewish worshipper! Perhaps, however, piyyutim were to be enjoyed primarily for their aesthetic value,
270. Heinemann and Petuchowski, Literature of the Synagogue, 2067. See also the comments of Pirqoi ben Baboi, in Ginzberg, Geniza Studies, II, 55152; J. Mann, Changes in the Divine Service, 25159; Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, VII, 9496; Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 4045. 271. See, for example, Graetz, History of the Jews, III, 11118. The inuence of Muslim poetry on Spanish Jewish piyyut is well recognized. 272. Werner, Sacred Bridge. See also his Hebrew and Oriental Christian Metrical Hymns, 397432. 273. Schirmann, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 12361. 274. Fleischer, Yozer, 1115.
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e.g., the melodies in which they were sung. Barring the latter, are we to assume that these compositions were recited when only a very few (if any) in attendance could understand their language? Alternatively, were the piyyutim intended primarily for certain types of audiences in which the participation of the learned was more pronounced (for example, an academy setting)? 275 Whatever the case, the contrast between the attempt to make the Torah reading and sermon comprehensible to a wider audience on the one hand, and the complexity of most piyyutim on the other, is puzzling. We are not in a position at present to answer the above questions. While the piyyut has led to a new understanding of the variety of components in Jewish worship of Late Antiquity, it has also left us with a series of intriguing questions to ponder. It is interesting to note that a number of themes that frequently appear in piyyutim also nd expression in other synagogue media in Byzantine Palestine, and there may well be a correlation between some of these phenomena. For example, six synagogues located throughout ancient Palestine display zodiac signs, and the use of the zodiac theme is also quite frequent in piyyutim.276 The theme is often introduced into the latter when addressing the change of season in the spring and fall. Thus, prayers for dew (on the rst day of Passover) or for rain (on Shemini Atzeret at the conclusion of the Sukkot holiday) use this theme, as do piyyutim marking the New Moon. Moreover, a paytan would use the zodiac motif to emphasize the entire creation: sadness at the loss of the Temple on Tisha bAv, and joy on Yom Kippur at the conclusion of the Avodah service, when the high priest emerges unscathed from his prayer in the Holy of Holies. The twenty-four priestly courses is another motif found in many piyyutim, especially those intended for Tisha bAv. The most famous of Byzantine paytanim, Elazar ha-Qallir (or Qillir), along with Haduta and Pinas, resorted to this theme regularly, even on ordinary Sabbaths. In this last instance, the piyyut was appended to the last blessing of the
275. Goitein (Mediterranean Society, II, 15961), Fleischer (Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 27375), and especially Elizur (Congregation in the Synagogue, 17190) have related to this conundrum. The same intellectual disparity seems to have surfaced with regard to some of the learned sermons of the church fathers. There, too, it is impossible to know exactly how many in the congregation really understood what was being said. A rather negative assessment of this problem with regard to preaching is oered in Maguire, Art and Eloquence, 6: Many of the church sermons were written in a highly complicated, aected, and archaizing style, which may have been as far from the everyday speech of a Byzantine in the Middle Ages as Chaucerian English is from the average English of today. The medieval preachers who continued to compose in this style were members of a tiny elite who had received their higher education in the schools of Constantinople. Their homilies may have been all but incomprehensible to provincial audiences if they were delivered in the style in which they were written. For a more positive assessment of the early Byzantine era, see Cunningham, Preaching and the Community, 2945. 276. Yahalom, Zodiac Signs, 31318; idem, Piyyu as Poetry, 11920; idem, Poetry and Society, 20 24; idem, Synagogue Inscriptions, 5455; Shinan, Synagogues, 148.
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Amidah and became part of the priestly benediction.277 It is quite possible that much of the impetus for composing such poetry came from priestly circles wishing to sustain the memory of the Temple and, indirectly, their own status in the community. These piyyutim go hand in hand with the ve inscriptions naming the priestly courses that were found in synagogues of Byzantine Palestine (a sixth was discovered in Yemen). Such plaques were presumably axed to the wall of the synagogue and, as noted above, listed the names of the twenty-four priestly courses and where these priests resided in the Galilee.278 Piyyutim, however, may also have had contemporary relevance in some of the themes they developed. These compositions often gave expression to the diculties and pressures felt by Jews living under Byzantine-Christian rule. Both the Imperial government and the church are reected in a sometimes critical, sometimes defensive posture assumed by various paytanim.279 A very powerful and touching expression of such sentiments is oered by the paytan Yannai to the verse And the Lord saw that Leah was hated (Gen. 29:30). Playing on the contrast of love (Rachel) and hate (Leah), the poet turns to God in despair and anguish, saying:
Our eyes are weak with longing for your love, O loving One, for we are hated by the hating enemy; Look how aicted we are from within, See how hated we are from without as You looked on Leas aiction and saw her tormented by hate. Within the house she was hated and from without detested. But not every loved one is loved nor every hated one hated: there are some who are hated below and yet loved above. Those whom You hate are hated; those whom You love are loved. The hatred against us is because we love You, O Holy One.280
To reinforce this attempt to reach the masses, we may refer to a corpus of some fty Aramaic piyyutim, which seem to have been intended for the large number of congregants who would best understand this language.281
277. Fleischer, Regarding the Courses, 14261; idem, Piyyutim of Yannai, 17684. 278. See above, Chap. 15; and Yahalom, Poetry and Society, 10716. 279. Maier, Piyyut, 100110; Mirsky, Beginnings of Piyyut, 4653. 280. Yahalom, Piyyu as Poetry, 125. 281. See Sokolo and Yahalom, Aramaic Piyyutim, 30921.
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On the basis of the material at hand, all the piyyutim we have come from Palestine. Babylonia does not seem to have produced any such compositions in Late Antiquity, and judging from the attitude of several geonim from ensuing centuries, there was not a great deal of enthusiasm for this genre, at the least within Babylonian rabbinic circles.282 Our information regarding the rest of the Diaspora is woefully scanty as well. Two inscriptions, one from Rome and another from Aphrodisias, speak of psalm singers, who may have been synagogue functionaries who recited hymns, perhaps their own creations, similar to piyyutim.283 A super orans (chief cantor) noted in an inscription from Emerita, Spain, also may have recited piyyutim along with the regular prayers, but of this we cannot be sure.284 Finally, a fragmentary Hebrew papyrus, dating to the third or fourth century c.e., was found in Oxyrhynchus in Egypt. The text appears to be a piyyut, and on the basis of the small fragment preserved it has been interpreted as a theme appropriate for commemorating the destruction of the Temple or perhaps the holiday of Shavuot.285
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agenda. The rst nine chapters describe the writing of Torah scrollsfrom laws relating to the writer to discourses on the scroll itself or textual variants and readings of particular verses. Chapters 1017 deal with the Torah readings, especially those intended for particular situations, from festivals and New Moons to Purim. The last four chapters (1821) focus on the prayer setting, and concern themselves with the psalms and liturgical matters connected with holidays and special occasions, as well as smatterings of aggadah. These last-mentioned works were a natural and necessary development of events, given the accumulation of customs and practices from Late Antiquity, as well as the ever more intensive contact (and, at times, conict) between Babylonia and Palestine. Such divergent customs evoked a response of either an acceptance of dierences (Dierences in Customs) or an attempt to establish a normative practice (Tractate Soferim). External factors also may have played a role in hastening this process of consolidation: the persecutions of Late Antiquity; the inuence of liturgical developments in the Christian and Islamic worlds; and competing ideologies close at hand, such as those of the Samaritans and Karaites. Whatever the case, this process was aided by new developments in the Jewish world, which included increased migration, easier opportunities for communication, and a centralization of political and religious authority in Babylonia.287 The need for such consolidation at this time seems to have been quite apparent, and a statement by Saadiah Gaon makes this quite clear:
It is thus necessary to gather the prayers and blessings of our time, i.e., the period of the Exile, especially because of what is happening owing to three things, neglect, additions, and deletions, and because of them one should be concerned about forgetting and making changes. . . . with respect to our peoples traditions regarding prayers and blessings, there are matters that have been so neglected that they have become completely forgotten except by select individuals; others were either so amplied or truncated that they have become completely changed and lost their original meaning.288
Tractate Soferim is the earliest post-talmudic compilation of Jewish liturgical practices, focusing on those traditions discussed in the Mishnah and talmuds, not infrequently adding details not otherwise documented.289 Tractate Soferim says very little about the regular weekly Torah readings, as most of the material relates to special occasions. Prayer, too, is ancillary in the compilers agenda. There is almost total silence regarding the Amidah and Shema, but preliminary and concluding hymns and psalms are spelled out, in some instances for the rst time in any extant source.290 A second recitation of the Barkhu introductory call to prayer is introduced for latecomers, and it is here that the Qaddish
287. Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, VII, 6473. 288. Siddur R. Saadja Gaon, 1011. 289. See, for example, Tractate Soferim 11, 46 (pp. 22024). 290. Ibid., 18, 1 (pp. 30810); and Liebreich, Compilation of Pesuke De-Zimra, 25567; idem, Pesuke De-Zimra Benedictions, 195206.
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prayer is rst noted,291 although the similarity between various phrases and terms in the Qaddish and Jesus pater nostrum prayer (Matt. 6:915; Luke 11:24) has long been noted. Finally, Tractate Soferim records an elaborate Torah-service liturgy led by the person who was to read the haftarah (14, 49); in addition to a series of verses culled from various parts of the Bible, this ceremony involved the congregations repetition of certain phrases.292 The Qaddish prayer appears as an integral part of the service. It was to be recited on at least two occasions, once at the conclusion of the Torah-reading ceremony and once as part of the afternoon (and presumably also the morning) service.293 As already noted, the earlier history of this prayer is shrouded in mystery.294 The central verse, taken from Ps. 113:2 and Dan. 2:20, may have been recited in synagogues as early as the second century.295 It is mentioned in a number of sources as a prayer of praise at the conclusion of a public-oriented study session.296 Another key phrasethe opening words of the Qaddish () is noted in the Yerushalmi as prefacing the prayer for rain.297 While it has generally been assumed, since the time of Zunz, that the Qaddish was originally associated with study, this may not have been the case.298 The other instances noted would seem to indicate that various phrases were used in dierent contexts, and the prayer we know as the Qaddish was a composite created apparently toward the close of Late Antiquity.299 As had been the case for centuries, the main parts of the service required a quorum of ten for public recitation: the Shema, the Amidah, the priestly blessing, the Torah and haftarah readings, and the Qaddish and Barkhu prayers.300 In Palestinian practice, this lastmentioned call to prayer (Barkhu) required only seven (and according to some, only six) people.
291. Tractate Soferim 10, 6 (pp. 21617). 292. For details of this ceremony, see Langer, From Study of Scripture, 4367; eadem, Early Medieval Celebrations of Torah, 11018. See also the comments in Blank, Havent You Learned This Yet? 94103. 293. Torah reading: Tractate Soferim 14, 6 (pp. 25960); 21, 5 (pp. 35758). Afternoon service (Minah): ibid., 18, 10 (p. 322). 294. The classic work on this subject is that of de Sola Pool, Kaddish. See also Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 8084. 295. See above, note 112. 296. B Sotah 49a; Midrash on Proverbs 10 (p. 57 and n. 38); Ecclesiastes Rabbah 9, 15, 7. See also Jellinek, Bet Midrash, V, p. 46. 297. Y Berakhot 9, 2, 14a; Y Taanit 1, 3, 64b. 298. Zunz, Haderashot, 483 n. 64; Elbogen, Jewish Liturgy, 80; Heinemann, Prayer, 26667. 299. For a somewhat speculative attempt to date the prayer to the third century, see Weitzman, Origin of the Qaddish, 13137. 300. Tractate Soferim 10, 6 (pp. 21617).
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Despite the generally accepted practice to combine the two key segments of the prayer service (i.e., the Shema and the Amidah) without interruption, it seems that, in Palestine at least, this was not always done. Although R. Yoanan had advocated adjoining the blessing of redemption ( )and the Amidah, the custom recorded in Tractate Soferim diers somewhat: And the sages directed the azzanim to recite the Qaddish after the redemption blessing, May the name of God be Blessed from now and forever more, and after this Blessed is God who is Blessed [i.e., the Barkhu]. 301 Thus, the conjunction of these two sections, so important according to a number of talmudic sources, was separated by additional elements. Moreover, the prominence and special status of this Shema section is expressed not only by the form of recitation, but also, as will be remembered, by the fact that this prayer was said standing,302 a not uncommon practice with certain prayers in the Palestinian setting. As far back as the rst century c.e., Bet Shammai insisted on standing for the morning recitation of the Shema, and the debate continued into the second century.303 Later on, in the amoraic period, dierent practices are likewise attested in this regard.304 The Palestinian custom of standing for important prayers was not restricted to the Shema and Amidah. We read, for example, of the congregation standing at one point during the blessings following the reading of the haftarah, on Passover when reciting the Hallel, after the Torah reading when saying the Qaddish, and on other occasions.305 In the seder (i.e., order of prayer) of the Babylonian R. Amram Gaon (ninth century), specic mention is made of this Palestinian practice, albeit in a sharply critical tone: As for those apparently inclined to the stricter opinion and say that one should take upon oneself the yoke of the kingdom of heaven [i.e., the Shema] when standing make a mistake, it is ignorance and unmannerliness and folly. 306 By this time, the daily service also included a special psalm for each day of the week; and the holiday liturgyincluding the three festivals, Hanukkah, Purim, the High Holidays, and Tisha bAvwas elaborated as well.307 With respect to the synagogue liturgy, it is clear that there was constant development throughout the period of the seven hundred or so years that we have been tracing. Beginning with an almost exclusive focus on the reading of Scriptures (at least in Second Temple Judaea), along with other activities intended to enhance this specic worship ex301. Ibid. See the comments of Higger, Tractate Soferim, 47. 302. Dierences in Customs, no. 1 (pp. 9194). On the signicance of standing during prayer, see Ehrlich, When You Pray, 3850. 303. M Berakhot 1, 3; T Berakhot 1, 4 (p. 2). 304. Y Berakhot 2, 1, 4a; cf., however, PRK 9, 5 (pp. 15556). 305. Haftarah: Tractate Soferim 13, 9 (pp. 24546). Passover Hallel: ibid., 18, 3 (p. 314). Qaddish: ibid., 21, 5 (pp. 35658). Other occasions: Margalioth, Dierences in Customs, 9293. 306. Seder R. Amram Gaon 1, 21 (I, p. 55). 307. Tractate Soferim 18, 2 (pp. 31013); 19, 5 (pp. 32728); 20, 59 (pp. 34552).
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perience, synagogue liturgy expanded over the course of Late Antiquity to include other important components. The prayer dimension was crystallized in the second and third centuries, while the piyyut emerged as a signicant element some time in the fourth to seventh centuries. The liturgical dimension, like the halakhah generally, was exposed to centripetal and centrifugal forces. There were periods of consolidation and there were others of increasing dierences and variations. The non-sacricial component of Jewish worship during the Second Temple period appears to have been diuse and largely dependent on local initiative. This was certainly the case with respect to the prayer component in Judaea; it appears only within certain circles such as the Temple priesthood, and in some sectarian groups such as at Qumran. On the other hand, the tannaitic period witnessed a serious rabbinic eort to create a new framework that would integrate some of what had existed earlier while adding new material as well. This eort, which lasted for a number of centuries, seems to have created a degree of unity and conformity while still allowing for a wide range of diversity. With the growth of a second rabbinic center in Babylonia in the third century, some signicant variations emerged in synagogue liturgy. Each tradition not only developed within its own particular religious and social setting, but was also inuenced by its immediate non-Jewish historical context. This is particularly evident in the homily, the piyyut, and the expanded targumic tradition (Pseudo-Jonathan) that developed in Byzantine Palestine; all this is in contrast to the Babylonian liturgy, which exhibited few of these last-mentioned components. The Babylonian Targum Onqelos, as against the Targum Pseudo-Jonathan of Palestine, is a case in point; the former has a more focused rabbinic agenda. Thus, by the very end of Late Antiquity, the pendulum had swung so much in the direction of diusion that the situation called for serious attempts at consolidation. This process was to continue for a number of centuries, reaching its apogee in the ninth and tenth centuries, with the appearance of the rst siddurim composed by Amram Gaon and Saadiah Gaon.308
308. Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews, VII, 11118; L. A. Homan, Canonization, 16071; Brody, Geonim, 21666.
seventeen
ewish art is a relatively new eld in Jewish studies. It was only in the rst half of the twentieth century that scholars began addressing this subject in one form or another. Pioneers in this eld include, among others, Kohl and Watzinger, Schwarz, Cohn-Wiener, Sukenik, Wischnitzer, Landsberger, and M. Narkiss.1 However, it was the discovery of a series of sensational archaeological remains (the Naaran and Bet Alpha mosaics in 191921 and 192829, respectively, the wall frescoes of Dura Europos in 1932, and the remains of the Bet Shearim necropolis in 193640) that catapulted this eld into the forefront of scholarly interest. In the following years, these nds and their ramications were discussed by Rostovtze, Grabar, Hopkins, du Mesnil de Buisson, and others.2 However, given the time required to digest fully these revolutionary ndings, together with the disruptions brought about by World War II, it was not until the late forties and fties that sustained attention was focused on these and other ndsearlier ones (such as the catacombs of Rome and Galilean-type synagogues) and others that had
1. For a survey of the development of the eld of Jewish art with specic reference to many of these scholars, see Sabar, Development, 26475. To Sabars list I would add Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen; Sukenik, Ancient Synagogue of Beth Alpha. See also Baron, Social and Religious History of the Jews (1937 ed.), III, 5153 n. 15. 2. See the bibliography for these years at the end of Sukeniks Synagogue of Dura, 19396; as well as Goodenough, Symbolism in Hellenistic Jewish Art, 10314; Gutmann, Early Synagogue, 133842.
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come to light in the 1930s (Gerasa, Jericho, useifa, and Apamea). Landsberger, Wischnitzer, and M. Narkiss are among the most prominent scholarly gures of the immediate postwar era.3 Since the 1950s, the study of Jewish art has been given an enormous boost by the publication of Goodenoughs monumental thirteen-volume study of ancient Jewish symbols (195368) and Kraelings meticulous nal report of the Dura synagogue nds (1956). Roths collection of essays by leading gures in the eld ( Jewish Art, 1961) is another landmark, as are Mayers Bibliography of Jewish Art (1967), the inauguration of the Journal of Jewish Art (1974, subsequently renamed Jewish Art), and the establishment of the Center for Jewish Art (1979) at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Moreover, these past decades have witnessed the discovery of a plethora of archaeological nds that have immensely enhanced the repertoire of Jewish artistic remains, as well as a broad spectrum of scholarly treatments. In the former category, mention should be made of the mosaic oors of ammat Tiberias, Sardis, Susiya, and Sepphoris and the carved stone fragments from the Sardis and Golan synagogues; in the latter category are a host of articles, collections thereof, and monographs, notable among which are those of Gutmann, Weitzmann and H. Kessler, Sed-Rajna, Revel-Neher, Hachlili, Fine, and Z. Weiss.4
METHODOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS
We have had occasion in previous chapters to refer to synagogue artistic remains at various sites, the dierent types of art forms, and their relationship to extant literary sources. However, we have yet to examine the meanings of these artistic expressions, their iconography, and the possible uses of this material for a fuller understanding of ancient Jewish society and its historical and social contexts, as well as of the synagogue and its religious traditions. In what follows I do not intend to present new ndings, oer additional interpretations of specic material, or summarize past research. My aim is essentially methodological. I wish to pose a number of questions regarding the cogency and feasibility of oering interpretations of Jewish artistic remains given our present state of knowledge. Although many art historians have been inclined to invest these artistic remains with heavy doses of symbolic and iconographic signicance, such interpretations more often than not remain unconvincing. The identication of the subject matter of a particular panel or scene
3. See Sabar, Development, 26871. 4. See the bibliographies listed in Gutmann, Early Synagogue, 1339; Weitzmann and H. Kessler, Frescoes, 19495; Sed-Rajna, Jewish Art; Revel-Neher, Larche dalliance; eadem, Image of the Jew; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael; eadem, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora; eadem, Menorah; Fine, Sacred Realm; idem, This Holy Place; Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption; Z. Weiss, Sepphoris Synagogue. A listing of recently published articles and monographs in the eld appears at the end of each volume of Jewish Art.
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is not usually a problem; biblical scenes as well as symbols and motifs drawn from Jewish tradition are, for the most part, readily identiable, and at times the depiction is even labeled with an appropriate inscription (e.g., at Dura Europos, Bet Alpha). The problem arises, however, when one sets out to interpret these depictions. What does a particular scene or sequence of scenes mean? What messages are being conveyed by the artist, the donors, or the community at large by these depictions? Here, the literary evidence is indispensable for the interpretation of art. It can provide the cultural-historical context of the artist and the congregation; at best, it can help us understand what beliefs and views were being expressed (see below). The nature of these reservations should be made clear at the outset. There can be few qualms about a working assumption that many (even most) narrative and gural depictions, as well as representations of Jewish religious artifacts in synagogues, had symbolic implications. This holds true for biblical representations, the Helios and zodiac motifs, and for most, if not all, depictions of Jewish religious symbols. It is hard to imagine, for example, that mosaic oors in synagogues were laid simply for ornamental purposes or that a panel with zodiac motifs was chosen merely for its aesthetic value and placed at random next to one containing a cluster of Jewish symbols or a biblical scene fraught with religious signicance (as is evidenced in literary sources).5 This does not mean, of course, that all depictions were necessarily imbued with symbolism. It is not at all clear whether each of the dozens of biblical scenes from Dura Europos had some sort of meaning or signicance, or whether their arrangement in a given register or wall was meant to invoke an overall message ensconced in the biblical narrative. The various explanations oered in response to the above questions have been diverse and very often mutually exclusive. While some arguments appear more compelling than othersand some may even be on the markcertainty in this regard is well nigh impossible. This brings us to the crux of the matter. Given the limited array of archaeological material at our disposal (even after a half-century of discovery and publication), together with the minimal amount of literary data that may in some way relate to these artistic motifs and their possible meanings, our hands are in eect tied when it comes to pinning down a specic interpretation. There simply is not enough of a historical context to oer a degree of assuredness in determining what a particular symbol or representation might have meant at a specic time or place. This is certainly true with regard to a site such as the Dura synagogue. Despite the synagogues unparalleled array of biblical scenes, we have no independent source that can shed light on the beliefs and practices of this Jewish community located on the Euphrates River on the eastern frontier of the Roman Empire in the rst half of the third century. Rabbinic textsmost often Palestinian midrashim or targumim invoked to reinforce one or another interpretation of these frescoeswere
5. Cf., however, Hachlili, Synagogues in the Land of Israel, 128.
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inevitably plucked from a world far removed from Dura itself. The assumption of a common tradition behind these midrashic and artistic expressions is possible, but becomes increasingly problematic as the chronological and geographical gap between the two corpora of evidence widens. Moreover, all-encompassing theories such as messianism (Wischnitzer, Goldstein), mysticism (Goodenough), and, more recently, the Jewish-Christian polemic (H. Kessler) have been suggested as capable of explaining the various gural and non-gural representations appearing throughout this synagogue.6 Such attempts, as well as less ambitious ones, are intriguing but ultimately unconvincing. Whereas some panels might t one or another theory quite nicely, in many instances the theory is not especially persuasive, and in still others the interpretations are forced. As a result, none has won general acclaim. One need not single out Dura Europos in this respect. The impressive mosaic oors of Bet Alpha, ammat Tiberias, and Sepphoris, which include zodiac signs and representations of Helios, do not, in and of themselves, provide a cultural or religious context in which to interpret these scenes. Even were we to draw from similar examples in Jewish and non-Jewish art, these remains would still require interpretation. Rabbinic literature, with its vast variety of traditions spanning a millennium, can likewise be inconclusive, and targumic traditions, ancient piyyutim, and Jewish liturgy are likewise problematic with regard to the dating and interpretation of these archaeological remains. The last-noted issue of interpretation is, however, further complicated. Even were we to arrive at some sort of satisfactory explanation, to whom would it apply? To the artisan who actually executed the work? To the one who produced the hypothetical pattern book from which the artisan drew his inspiration? To the donors or synagogue leaders, who undoubtedly had a decisive say in the choice of artistic motifs? Or, perhaps, to the community at large, which may also have had some inputalthough this probably varied from place to place? And to which Jewish community are we referringthose living when the synagogue was built or those living fty or a hundred years later? That a motif as rich as the Aqedah or Helios would have conveyed dierent meanings to dierent people, even at one and the same time, not to speak of dierent generations, should be rather self-evident (see below). Moreover, symbolic and representational interpretations were not necessarily constant in varying historical and social contexts. An urban setting may have given rise to an interpretation that would have been unknown or unacceptable in a rural context, and the
6. Wischnitzer, Messianic Theme; Goldstein, Judaism of the Synagogues; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols; Weitzmann and H. Kessler, Frescoes. For a suggestion that the art of the baptistry at the Dura church could be understood as a Christian polemic in favor of the primacy of Sunday as the proper day of worship, see Goranson, Battle over the Holy Day, 2333. For another instance of a Jewish-Christian polemic involving art forms, see H. Kessler, Through the Temple Veil, 5377; see also Maser, Synagoge und Ecclesia, 926. On the synagogue painting as an anti-pagen polemic, see Elsner, Cultural Resistance, 269304.
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same holds true of a community in the Roman East as against one in the West, or one in a Greek-speaking (and presumably more acculturated) environment as opposed to one in which Aramaic was the lingua franca. Changes in interpretation were inevitable over the centuries, and even over generations. The facade of the Temple, the Torah shrine, or representations of Jewish symbols may not have meant the same thing in third-century Dura that they did in fourth-century Rome, fth-century Sepphoris, or sixth-century Bet Alpha. Likewise, Helios in fourth-century Tiberias may have evoked a set of beliefs and associations dierent from those evoked in rural Naaran or Bet Alpha in the sixth century.7 As Elsner has argued in his work on Roman and Byzantine artistic perspectives, People relate to works of art in dierent ways, depending upon dierent contexts and at dierent times. 8
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building has anywhere near the same kinds of gural remains. The six Palestinian synagogues with the Helios and zodiac design, in addition to about the same number featuring a biblical gure (Gaza, Susiya, Naaran, Sepphoris, and perhaps Merot) or a biblical scene (Bet Alpha and Sepphoris), are a distinct minority of the synagogue remains discovered throughout Israel. Most synagogues appear to have had minimal ornamentation, and these contain, for the most part, oral and geometric designs of greater or lesser sophistication.12 Thus, in the overwhelming majority of synagogues from Late Antiquity, the possible functions of artto stimulate historical memory, to highlight ritual symbols and, through them, certain religious observances; to complement the instruction that took place in religious institutions; and to instill messianic hopescould hardly be realized.13 Comparison of Jewish and Christian art with a view toward their connection with liturgical function, a topic that has merited some consideration of late, is likewise fraught with diculties. Much of the concern of church art historians in relating artistic material to liturgical ritual is often explained by the need to illustrate and concretize highly complex theological issues. The didactic function of art in the church setting is assumed to be of great importance. In discussing apsidal imagery, Hellemo remarks:
During the liturgical introductory invocation (Sursum corda), the congregations attention is called upon and mental concentration is requested. As the celebration of the Eucharist involves complicated chains of thought, the participants need all the help they can get in order to understand the depths of meaning contained in the act. To the overall synthesis of the various chains of thought which contribute to the meaning of the Eucharist, the visible pictorial programs are of the greatest value. Imagerys most important quality is to recapitulate in synthesis that which words and ritual acts take much time to present. Thus, all additional elements entering the liturgy as it progresses can be retained by the congregation. In our opinion, apsidal imagery unies and summarizes the central content of the eucharistic prayer. By doing this it furnishes a certain support for members of the congregation in their participation and understanding of the ritual celebration itself.14
The inclination to relate Christian practice to the Jewish context requires careful examination, given the striking dierences in the nature of the liturgy of each. One would
12. See Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 37075; Vitto, Interior Decoration, 297 99. This is based on extant artistic remains, primarily of mosaic oors. What the walls of synagogues might have displayed is, with rare exception, unknown (ibid., 299300). 13. On the possible didactic role of the Dura frescoes, see the recent Moon, Nudity and Narrative, 590, and on p. 588, the quotation from Pope Gregory the Great: Pictures are used in church so that those who are illiterate may, by looking at the walls, read there what they are unable to read in books. 14. Hellemo, Adventus Domini, 281. See also Sinding-Larsen, Iconography and Ritual, passim; Mathews, Clash of Gods, 14280. With regard to the Byzantine world generally, see MacCormack, Art and Ceremony; and Maguire, Art and Eloquence, 10911.
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be hard pressed to make a case for comparable complex doctrines among Jews that might have required the assistance of narrative or symbolic art. Moreover, Jewish liturgy had already incorporated pedagogical aids for understanding the Bible, e.g., targum and sermons. Admittedly, it has been suggested at times that synagogue art was meant to illustrate one or another aspect of Jewish liturgy (e.g., the zodiac signs mentioned in some piyyutim, the Aqedah narrative read at least several times annually, or an eschatological theme). Even if such a claim is entertained, it would be of an entirely dierent order than the situation envisioned for the contemporary Christian context. Thus, any comparison between Christian and Jewish practice in this regard demands cautious scrutiny, along with a rigorous rationale as to why symbolic art would have been deemed necessary in a synagogue context.
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sumptions that require a stretch of the imagination. Moreover, not only is the chronological factor an issue, but so, too, are the geographical disparities. Thus, the appearance of a particular tradition in one or another rabbinic collection does not necessarily mean it was known to the founders of a particular synagogue somewhere else, or to the artist who employed a particular motif. For example, it cannot be automatically assumed that views expressed in rabbinic traditions were always, or even usually, widely publicized. Nor is it clear whether such views, even if known, were always adopted by a particular community. Behind any such correlationwhether between rabbinic sources and artistic remains, or with regard to an identical interpretation of a motif appearing in several placeslies the assumption of a set of common beliefs and values among the Jewish communities of Late Antiquity. Such an assumption, at this stage of our knowledge, is gratuitous. Since literary sources could conceivably hold the key to a persuasive interpretation of artistic remains, let us examine this dimension in greater detail. What would be an ideal situation for utilizing literary material for iconographic purposes? The existence of both synagogal art remains and a contemporary commentary of its iconography would probably provide a soundalthough still not totally conclusivebasis from which to draw conclusions. However, even in such ideal circumstances, a good deal of caution is required. The sixth-century rhetor Choricius of Gaza describes the decoration of a church in his city, but Grabar terms his description a piece of rhetoric and goes on to say that we cannot eliminate the possibility that the text, while not necessarily contradicting the images of Gaza, interpreted and enriched their iconography in the direction of drama and narrative. 18 In any case, to the best of my knowledge, no comparable correlation between a contemporary literary text and a specic artistic representation exists within a Jewish context. A somewhat less ideal situation would be a source from the time and place of a specic synagogue building that comments generally on a motif appearing in that synagogues art. In this case at least, one could make a claim that the ideas articulated in that source were current at that time. However, this type of evidence is not easy to nd, and even if it had existed there is no way of being sure that the opinion expressed by the author mirrors the views of those who determined the synagogue decorations. Thus, to link the comments of the fourth-century R. Zeira regarding the relationship between the rule of a governor, a cosmocrator (presumably the emperor), and God with the Helios or sun depiction on the Sepphoris synagogue oor (and even that of fourth-century ammat Tiberias) may be interesting but far from compelling.19
lingual but, probably, scarcely familiar with Hebrew. Compositional aspects within the scenes themselves and the repetition of the main character, frame to frame, suggest placards; these stylistic features are preserved on placards from other later art-historical traditions. See also ibid., 60914. 18. Grabar, Christian Iconography, 101. 19. Y Avodah Zarah 3, 1, 42c. See Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption, 3839. See also the reservations in S. Schwartz, On the Program and Reception, 16870.
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While contemporaneity should be considered an important factor in lending some degree of cogency to a literary reference, whether it is sucient in and of itself is yet another question. Other considerations may restrict our use of such a source, to wit, the fourth-century Sefer Harazim (Book of Secrets), a handbook of practical magic. Reference therein to Helios as an archangel knowing the secrets of the universe is a case in point.20 Since this composition is more or less contemporaneous with the ammat Tiberias synagogue, the link between this literary reference and the mosaic depiction of Helios or the sun may be self-evident. Even here, however, we have no idea of the extent to which the beliefs expressed in Sefer Harazim permeated Jewish society. Moreover, the implications of such an association are quite far-reaching, even revolutionary, given the unorthodox (i.e., unrabbinic) beliefs reected in this book. A second contemporary reference is Epiphanius description of the Pharisees, wherein it is stated that the latter used Hebrew names not only for astrological terms (i.e., sun, moon, and planets), but also for the zodiac signs.21 It is rather obvious that this description has nothing to do with the pre-70 Pharisees, as there is no other attestation for such speculation in Pharisaic circles. More likely, Epiphanius had in mind current (synagogue?) practice; however, the particular connection between such usage and the Pharisees (or should we say, rabbis) remains enigmatic. It goes without saying that extreme caution must be exercised when utilizing much earlier materials to explain artistic remains of Late Antiquity. This certainly holds true with regard to the Bible.22 From the rst century c.e., both Philo and Josephus have at times been invoked in attempts to explain the signicance of the zodiac and other symbols.23 Other than the fact that these earlier Jewish writers related to such phenomena, which is interesting in its own right, there is probably little to learn from them regarding the use of artistic motifs centuries later. One might, of course, claim that all current theories are relevant and that the various interpretations suggested to date may in some way reect a similar range of associations in antiquity; multiple and simultaneous interpretations for any given symbol undoubtedly existed. However, such a line of reasoning is of limited value, telling us everything and nothing; it is, in the end, wholly speculative, and we are left with no indication of what, if any, was a primary or more accepted interpretation. Still, this may be all that we can aspire to at the moment. The desire to fathom the meaning and signicance of artistic remains engages modern scholarship, and many of
20. Margolioth, Sepher Ha-Razim, 99; M. A. Morgan, Sepher Ha-Razim, 71. 21. Epiphanius, Panarion 16, 2, 15. 22. See, for example, the analysis of in Englard, Eschatological Signicance, 3348. 23. See Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, VIII, 20914; 22432; Wilkinson, Beit Alpha Synagogue Mosaic, 2324, 26; and also idem, From Synagogue to Church, 88113. On the other hand, according to Josephus, the zodiac signs were omitted from the heavenly signs portrayed on the Temple curtain (War 5, 21314).
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the suggestions raised may indeed reect ideas and opinions current in antiquity. Beyond this supposition, however, there may be little more to say.
Menorah
No Jewish symbol is more ubiquitous in Late Antiquity than the menorah, although representations of menorot before the third century c.e. are few and far between. The menorah appears on a coin of Mattathias Antigonus and on several plaster fragments and a sundial found in the Jewish Quarter and Temple Mount excavations, respectively, as
24. I am using the term Jewish art with reference not only to uniquely Jewish symbols and motifs (e.g., the menorah), but also to all artistic representations used in Jewish religious settings where one might expect to nd an articulation of ideas and values. In Late Antiquity, this would include synagogues and cemeteries. 25. On the other hand, Diaspora synagogues found many other ways of incorporating inuences from their surrounding cultures: in architecture, art, inscriptions, and synagogue and communal organization. See above, Chap. 8; and below, Chap. 18.
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well as on the walls of Jasons tomb in the Reavia section of Jerusalem. In the period following the destruction of the Temple, the menorah was depicted on the Arch of Titus and perhaps on several ossuaries and a number of oil lamps of the Darom type as well.26 However, it is only in the third and especially fourth centuries that the menorah became the most frequently depicted Jewish symbol, appearing in a wide variety of contexts burial sites and synagogues, glass vessels, household objects, lamps, amulets, and seals. In synagogues, it appears on capitals, a column, column bases, lintels, chancel screens (g. 91), and mosaic oors, often together with one or more other ritual symbols.27 Remains of freestanding menorot have been discovered at ammat Tiberias, En Gedi (g. 92), Sardis, Susiya, Eshtemoa, and Maon ( Judaea). The description of the menorah appears to be relatively clear-cut. However, when we discuss the menorahs function and signicance, the issues become more complicated. Whether menorot were actually used in the synagogue and, if so, whether they were intended to be decorative, functional, or symbolic is an open question.28 Moreover, there is little agreement as to what, in fact, the menorah in the synagogue setting was supposed to representthe Tabernacle or Temple menorah or a menorah in the synagogue hall itself? In other words, was it intended to convey to the congregation memories of the past, to reinforce current practice, or both? 29 The meaning accorded this symbol has engendered a variety of theories. Goodenough has suggested that it represented the heavenly spheres and was a true symbol of God, the source of their Light, their Law, the Tree of Life, the astral path to God. 30 Smith ex26. Meshorer, Ancient Jewish Coinage, I, 9294; Avigad, Discovering Jerusalem, 14750; B. Mazar, Excavations, 82; Rahmani, Catalogue, 5152, and nos. 815, 829; Sussman, Ornamental Jewish Oil-Lamps, 20. 27. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 7277; Yarden, Tree of Light, 2938; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 23656; idem, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 31644; Barag, Menorah, 4546. 28. Sukenik (Ancient Synagogue of Beth Alpha, 34), Goodenough ( Jewish Symbols, IV, 7476), Negev (Chronology of Seven-Branched Menorah, 197), Hachlili (Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 253), and Amit (Marble Menorah, 58; Synagogues, 16265) believe they were actually put to use; Barag (Menorah, 46) and Foerster (Allegorical and Symbolic Motifs, 546) assume they were merely decorative. 29. See above, Chap. 7. 30. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IV, 96. See also C. L. Meyers, Tabernacle Menorah, 187.
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pands Goodenoughs interpretation, associating images of the cosmos and the saints with the menorah.31 Both Barag and Hachlili opine that the menorah symbolized the yearning of Jews for the Temple and their hopes for its renewal, as well as providing a countersymbol to the Christian cross,32 while a number of other scholars have focused exclusively on the menorahs reputedly messianic and eschatological signicance.33 Fine and Zuckerman call attention to the menorah as a symbol of minority status.34 As the most ubiquitous representation in Jewish art, the menorah undoubtedly served as a symbol; as such, it bore a wide range of meanings, as attested by extant literary sources (viz., Zechariah, Philo, Josephus, and rabbinic literature). As noted, scholars have posited several creative theories as to what this symbol may have meant; other suggestions will surely surface in the future. Whether the menorahs meanings changed over time or varied in dierent locales and historical settings cannot be determined. As the quintessential Jewish symbol, the menorah was certainly associated with a wide range of meanings, and, indeed, its popularity was probably due, in large measure, to the fact that it was amenable to varying interpretations. Thus, the most that can be said is that at any one time and in any specic context the menorahs signicance was undoubtedly multifaceted.35
31. M. Smith, Image of God, 508. 32. Barag, Menorah, 4447; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 25455. 33. See, for example, Roth, Messianic Symbols, 15164; Wirgin, Menorah as Symbol of Judaism, 14042; idem, Menorah as Symbol of the After-Life, 1024; Namenyi, Essence of Jewish Art, 64; Sperber, History of the Menorah, 155. 34. Fine and Zuckerman, Menorah as Symbol, 2431. For an example of the extensive use of rabbinic sources in determining the meaning of the menorah as a symbol of Jewish spirituality, see Klagsbald, Menorah as Symbol, 12634. 35. Given this open-ended situation regarding the menorahs meaning, another question may be more protably posed: Why did this artifact, and many others to a lesser extent (e.g, the shofar, lulav, etc.), become so popular in Late Antiquity and not beforehand? Did this have to do with the development of
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93. Zodiac panel from Sepphoris. Note the sun rays that replace the gure of Helios, which usually appears in other synagogues.
The search for the meaning of this motif is compounded by a series of discoveries over the past three decades. First, in 1967, was the publication of Sefer Harazim, which featured a prayer to the angel Helios.41 Soon after, a list of the names of the zodiac signs (but not their artistic representations) was discovered in the synagogue of En Gedi. Helios is not mentioned in this list, nor is his gure accompanied elsewhere by an identifying inscriptionunlike the zodiac signs. The Sepphoris mosaic adds a signicant variant: the gure of Helios himself is absent from the chariot, and is replaced by the sun and its rays (g. 93). Presumably, this congregation was less conservative in its artistic tastes than
ism, see L. A. Homan, Censoring In and Censoring Out, 1937; on the zodiac as representing the presence and power of God, see Ness, Astrology and Judaism, 12631. 41. Following Margalioth, Sepher Ha-Razim, 99: I adore you, Helios, who rises in the east, good mariner, trustworthy guardian, trustworthy [or: exalted] leader of the suns rays, reliable [witness], who of old did establish the mighty [or: heavenly] wheel, holy orderer [of the stars], ruler of the axes [of the heavens], lord, brilliant leader, king, establisher of the stars. For a slightly dierent reading, see M. A. Morgan, Sepher Ha-Razim, 71.
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the one at En Gedi, although more so than elsewhere, at least with respect to depicting Helios. The importance of the Helios-zodiac motif cannot be underestimated. As noted, it appears at a wide range of sites (i.e., urban and rural, and in all parts of the country), including the two most important cities of Jewish Palestine, and is invariably positioned in the very center of the mosaic oor.42 This motif always appears in conjunction with other panels containing well-known ritual symbols or depictions of clear religious signicance (the Aqedah, the Tabernacle sacrices, and other oerings). Quite obviously, the Helioszodiac motif bore an appealing message. But what precisely that was, and whether it was always the same from place to place and from one era to the next, is as yet an unresolved issue. We nd ourselves here at the limits of what can be said with any degree of certainty. Further discoveries will hopefully oer us new insights in this regard.43
Programmatic Explanations
In most instances, scholars have focused on specic images or panels in discussing Jewish artistic forms. On rare occasion, an attempt has been made to explain two or more contiguous representations (such as Jewish symbols and the zodiac motif ), each of which seems to be of consequence both religiously and symbolically. Three sites have merited such attention, since panels and registers with rich associative motifs and apparently laden with meaning have been found there. The best known is Dura Europos; its walls are covered with biblical scenes, and the center of its focal western wall features a series of depictions anked by four large gures that have been a subject of much scholarly attention.44 Some have attempted to interpret all the scenes with one all-encompassing theory (e.g., Goodenough, Wischnitzer, and Goldstein), while others have interpreted each of the three registers as representing a dierent theme, the three together forming a trilogy of ideas also found in rabbinic literature (e.g., Sonne, Grabar, and du Mesnil de Buisson). More recently, H. Kessler has suggested that a Jewish-Christian polemic is reected in these scenes. On the other hand, many scholars have disavowed the existence of any overriding theme, contenting themselves with the view that what is represented here is simply a series of biblical accounts of Israels history featuring the salvational deeds of God (e.g., Kraeling, Bickerman).45
42. On the zodiac in antiquity generally, see Gundel, Zodiakos, passim. 43. See in this regard the thoughtful statements in Goodenough, Symbolism in Hellenistic Jewish Art, 10814. 44. See above, as well as Chap. 8. 45. See above, Chap. 8 (Dura), as well as Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 34648; Gutmann, Programmatic Painting, 13754; and esp. idem, Early Synagogue, 131334, with accompanying bibli-
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Until recently, the only site in Byzantine Palestine that had merited theories regarding an overall programmatic message of this type is the Bet Alpha synagogue. Its mosaic oor is unusual in that all three panels bear signicant depictions. From north to south, i.e., in the direction of the apse, the panels are devoted to the following: the Aqedah; Helios and the zodiac signs; and a full array of Jewish symbols (the Torah shrine, pairs of menorot, shofarot, lulavim, ethrogim, and incense shovels). Goodenough was the rst to suggest an all-encompassing theory, viewing the three panels as representative of the mystical ascent through sacrice (the Aqedah), then through the upper regions of heaven (the zodiac), and nally through the curtains of the Temple to the true heaven.46 This suggestion was developed further by Goldman, who placed special emphasis on the scene that representsas he interprets ita portal to the celestial regions; it is the architectural symbol of the door as the celestial abode. 47 In another vein, Wischnitzer has interpreted these panels as reective of the Sukkot holiday and the blessings of the harvest, while Wilkinson, aided by the writings of Philo, Josephus, and the mystical tract Sefer Yetzirah, interprets the three panels as references to the Temple precincts: the Aqedah symbolizes the altar; the zodiac, the Hekhal; and the Torah Shrine and related ritual objects, the Dvir, or Holy of Holies.48 Whatever ingenuity and creativity one might wish to ascribe to any or all of the above opinions, none has succeeded in winning much support over the years. The discovery of the Sepphoris synagogue in 1993 revealed a mosaic oor with no fewer than seven horizontal bands or registers (some divided into two or three panels) bearing rich and at times unusual motifs (g. 94). Several of these motifs were new to the synagogue scene, and even when a theme is known from elsewhere, the Sepphoris example often exhibits important and striking dierences. On the oor, moving from the entrance toward the bima (Panels 71), we see the following: Two registers presumably deal with the Abraham story (the angels visit to Abraham and Sarah, and the story of the Aqedah); one is devoted to the Helios-zodiac motif, with a number of important variations (the use of Hebrew for the names of the months, the inclusion of a Greek dedicatory inscription, the use of Greek names for the seasons, and, most of all, as noted, the representation of the sun and its rays instead of Helios, as elsewhere); two registers detail the Tabernacle-Temple, some of their appurtenances (shofar, meal oering, and oil), daily sacrices (with the relevant biblical verses), the showbread table, rstfruits basket, and the gure of Aaron; the next register depicts the familiar cluster of Jewish symbols
ography. On Goodenoughs thesis and reactions to it, see M. Smith, Goodenoughs Jewish Symbols, 5368; Neusner, Studying Ancient Judaism, 2957. 46. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, I, 24653. 47. Goldman, Sacred Portal, 103; see also p. 124. 48. Wischnitzer, Beit Alpha Mosaic, 13344; Wilkinson, Beit Alpha Synagogue Mosaic, 27; Roussin, Zodiac, 8396.
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surrounding the Torah shrine; and, nally, the topmost register depicts two pairs of lions anking a wreath containing a partially preserved Greek inscription.49 The synagogues excavators suggest dividing the oors registers into three main foci, which together form one all-encompassing theme of promise and redemption. The Abraham stories represent the former, the Tabernacle-Temple panels the latter, while the Helios-zodiac motif reects the power of the God of Israel that will facilitate this redemption.50 It is an interesting suggestion; alternatively, the dierent registers may just as well represent a dierent sequence of ideas (covenant, creation, and redemption), a series of separate and independent themes, or certain liturgical motifs, especially such as those found in piyyutim.51 Finally, a number of scholars have recently highlighted the Jewish-Christian polemic as the component that determined the selection and placement of the pavements various motifs.52 In summary, there can be little question that Jewish art includes many symbolic representations, and that any one motif or depiction may well have multiple meanings, not only over the generations but also at any one time. However, given the limitations of our literary and archaeological sources at present, any explanation remains largely speculative. If the issue is only what these depictions signify to us, their viewers and interpreters, some fteen hundred years later, then all the above theories are engaging and welcome. If, however, the goal is to determine what the original intent was of those who made, paid for, or simply gazed at the images, then we simply do not have enough information to determine the truth of the matter.
CONCLUDING PERSPECTIVES
In dealing with the interpretation of Jewish art, we are inevitably caught on the horns of a dilemma. The limited amount of material available forces us to rely heavily on literary sources and Christian artistic parallels in order to make some sense of the material. But this approach carries with it the danger of imposing external agendas on Jewish artistic remains. In addition, it assumes, rather than argues, that such inuences did exist. And even if we do claim some sort of connection between the literary and artistic evidence, there is also the possibility that it worked in the opposite direction, namely, that artistic remainswhat E. Kessler has referred to as artistic midrash 53inuenced the
49. Z. Weiss and Netzer, Promise and Redemption, 1632. 50. Ibid., 3439. 51. See, for example, Fine, Art and the Liturgical Context; idem, This Holy Place, 12125; Shinan, Synagogues in the Land of Israel, 13052; S. Schwartz, Imperialism, 26374. 52. See Khnel, Synagogue Floor Mosaic, 3143; H. Kessler, Sepphoris Mosaic, 6472; and Z. Weiss, Sepphoris Synagogue. 53. E. Kessler, Art Leading the Story.
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literary midrash of the rabbis. Thus, much caution is required to argue for one or another interpretation. The case of Jewish art is further complicated by its localized nature; in fact, it is quite analogous to what we have seen with regard to other aspects of the synagogueits architecture, plan, liturgy, ocials, etc. In contrast to contemporary Christendom, there was no political or ecclesiastical authority that might have determined, or at least seriously inuenced, such selections. An example of such intervention in the Christian framework is reected in the account of Mark the Deacon with regard to the building of the Gazan cathedral, which was to replace the pagan temple, the Marneion: The holy Bishop had engaged the architect Runus from Antioch, a dependable and expert man, and it was he who completed the entire construction. He took some chalk and marked the outline [thesis] of the holy church according to the form of the plan [skariphos] that had been sent by the most pious Eudoxia. And as for the holy Bishop, he made a prayer and a genuexion, and commanded the people to dig. Straightaway all of them, in unison of spirit and zeal, began to dig, crying out, Christ has won! . . . And so in a few days all the places of the foundations were dug out and cleared. 54 In Jewish society of Late Antiquity, local communities were autonomous in the construction of their buildings. Only when one compares a Galilean-type or Golan synagogue with one from southern Judaea and one from an urban center in Palestine, or, alternatively, when one compares the Diaspora synagogues at ammam Lif, Sardis, and Dura, can one appreciate the almost innite range of architectural and artistic expression among Jewish communities. No two mosaic oors are identical; Jewish art, like Jewish liturgy, was very decentralized. Thus, determining the intent of builders or donors in such circumstances is well nigh impossible. From the aniconic to the gural, a vast array of combinations of human, animal, oral, and geometric patterns are in evidence. Jewish communities demonstrated extensive autonomy in choosing the types of decorations and symbols to grace their public buildings. Discussions of Jewish art have understandably focused on the sensational and exceptional the zodiac signs, the image of Heliosas well as biblical gures and episodes. Studies on Dura, Bet Alpha, ammat Tiberias, and now Sepphoris have quite naturally always held center stage. However, these spectacular examples constitute only a small percentage of the totality of synagogue art. The simplicity of the majority should be of no less consequence than the designs and motifs among the more lavishly decorated. Recognition of synagogue diversity may be seen as inversely proportional to the chance of reaching any sort of satisfactory iconographic interpretation, given our present sources. However, it also may provide the best avenue available for deciphering this art. If the local autonomy was indeed decisive, then our knowledge of a given community
54. Mark the Deacon, Life of Porphyry 78, as quoted in Mango, Art of the Byzantine Empire, 31.
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and its surroundings may, at best, provide the necessary clues for interpreting its art. For most communities, such data are irretrievable; for others, such as ammat Tiberias, Sepphoris, Bet Shearim, Dura Europos, Sardis, and Rome (fortunately, those sites with signicant artistic remains), a knowledge of the community, the synagogues founders, and the urban social context may allow us to move forward in interpreting the meaning of the Jewish art represented in each.55
55. It is this task, inter alia, that I will address in my forthcoming Visual Judaism.
eighteen
n numerous occasions throughout this volume, we have commented on the extent to which the synagogue was shaped by the social, material, cultural, and religious contexts of the ancient world. The present chapter will both focus on this dimension, bringing together many of the themes that have already been discussed, and, at the same time, address the issues of the uniquely Jewish aspects and continuity of the institution. Treating these complementary components together will allow for a more comprehensive understanding of the growth and development of the synagogue during the rst seven centuries of our era. There is no doubt that the study of hellenization, i.e., the impact of the larger GrecoRoman and Byzantine cultures on the Jews of Late Antiquity, has been one of the most fruitful areas of inquiry over the past several generations. The term addresses the cultural vortex of Classical antiquity and includes Eastern as well as Western components; it thus refers to the overall eect, not always on a conscious level, that this larger cultural matrixthe synchronic dimensionhad on Jewish life. Byzantine Christianity is included as well, since it embraced the Classical tradition in a myriad of ways. Often these dynamics involved a complex process of adopting and adapting various components of these cultures as they impacted on the material, social, cultural, and religious realms. No area of Jewish life was immune to such inuences.1
1. For a more detailed treatment of this topic, see L. Levine, Judaism and Hellenism, Chap. 1.
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Nevertheless, certain distinctions must be made in this regard. Not all areas of Jewish life were equally aected (e.g., physical remains as against religious matters), nor were all strata of society equally exposed or inuenced; the wealthy, for example, were usually more amenable to such inuences than the poor. Nor did hellenization aect all places in a similar fashion. Cities were more intensively exposed to cosmopolitan trends than were villages, Diaspora urban communities probably more so than Jewish cities of the Galilee, while certain regions in Palestine were more isolated geographically and thus less aected than others. However, equally important to our understanding of the synagogues evolution is its diachronic dimension. The power of tradition and earlier practice are crucial components to bear in mind at all times, for much of Jewish life at any given moment is composed (in varying degrees) of these elements. This is the case even though many of these Jewish elements, at some point in the past, might themselves have been considered innovations, perhaps even of foreign origin. Nevertheless, in the course of time, these aspects had become so much a part of Jewish behavior and practice as to be considered inherently Jewish by later generations. The diachronic component is obviously of enormous signicance regarding the synagogue in particular. After all, it was already a central institution throughout the Jewish world in the rst century c.e., functioning as a communal as well as religious center. Innumerable sources trace its development and evolution through each of these centuries, and the Byzantine synagogue clearly had its roots in earlier Roman (and even Hellenistic) precedents. However, while the synagogues communal dimension remained central to its mandate, the religious aspect, as we have seen, was a dynamic component that gained prominence only during Late Antiquity. In what follows, we should be aware of the diering emphases in our sources with respect to the issues at hand. The literary material tends to emphasize the continuity of the synagogues role in Jewish society; the same range of activities, the same titles of synagogue ocials, and the same prominence of this institution as a Jewish public space par excellence are highlighted in documents dating to these centuries. Contrastingly, the archaeological material, deriving in the main from the later (i.e., Byzantine) period, emphasizes the synchronic dimension of the institution, i.e., what the institution borrowed from its Christian context. Given the fact that the archaeological remains deal with Jewish material culture that, as we have repeatedly noted, was always heavily inuenced by the surrounding world, the impact of this data on our understanding of the synchronic dimension of the synagogue is inevitable and predictable. Thus, the nature and proclivity of a specic type of source must be fully ascertained before drawing far-reaching conclusions on the basis of one and to the exclusion of the other.2 Only by fully considering the
2. See, for example, S. Schwartz, Imperialism, 24089.
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literary and archaeological data, thereby factoring the diachronic and synchronic aspects as integral parts of this phenomenon, can a full and balanced picture be drawn. In examining the variety of diachronic and synchronic inuences on the synagogue, three phenomena become clear: the degree to which the synagogue was shaped by its surroundings; the ways in which its Jewish components found expression; and, nally, the seemingly innite variety of syntheses eected at dierent times and in dierent places. Let us begin by examining the major areas of outside inuence manifested in this institution.
ARCHITECTURAL EV IDENCE
The Jewish people never possessed an independent architectural tradition either in their private or public domain, and, as a result, borrowed heavily from the regnant architectural styles of contemporary society. A visit to the Museum of the Diaspora at Tel Aviv University oers a striking demonstration of this fact in its exhibit of miniature replicas of synagogue buildings from various periods, each constructed and decorated in the tradition and style of the predominant culture of the time. Thus, many Galilean and Golan synagogues boasted a monumental facade with a single or tripartite entrance, lintels, doorposts, friezes, Syrian gables, windows, and arches with stone reliefs; such elements are also well attested in Roman public buildings and especially temples of second- and third-century Syria, as well as in a number of Byzantine churches from both Syria and Egypt (g. 95).3 Given the extensive imitation of external architectural models, it was nearly impossible to distinguish a synagogue from a non-Jewish edice merely by its exterior, a fact not only corroborated by archaeological remains, but also reected in a rabbinic tradition.4 According to this source, the sages debated whether one who bowed in deference before a pagan temple, thinking it was a synagogue, was guilty of committing an intentional or unintentional sin. While the halakhic aspects of this rabbinic discussion are not relevant to our purposes, the historical reality behind the example is most germane. The rabbis clearly conceived of a situation in which someone walking in the streets of a town or city would be unable to dierentiate between a pagan temple and a synagogue on the basis of the buildings exterior. This story thus conrms what is patently evident from archaeological nds, namely, the striking similarity in the external features of Jewish and non-Jewish buildings. This, in fact, was the assumption of Kohl and Watzinger and others who have suggested reconstructions of the facades and interiors of Galilean synagogues.5
3. Foerster, Art and Architecture, 13946; Tchalenko, Villages antiques, II, pl. xi. 4. B Shabbat 72b. 5. See, for example, Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen, 138203; Meyers et al., Excavations at An-
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The assumption of outside inuence likewise governs most suggestions regarding the models that inuenced Second Temple Judaean synagogue buildings. Debate has generally revolved around which non-Jewish precedent served as the main source of inspiration. With regard to the Masada synagogue, for example, Yadin has suggested that it followed the plan of the Hellenistic council hall (i.e., the bouleuterion), Foerster that it followed that of the pagan pronaos found in a number of Dura Europos temples, and Maoz that it had an Alexandrian prototype.6 A similar range of opinion has been advanced regarding the architectural origins of the Galilean synagogue: Roman basilicas; Nabatean temple courtyards; Herodian palaces as attested in Jericho, themselves a product of Hellenistic-Roman models; the earlier Masada-type synagogue.7 Even Tsafrir, who has proposed according greater weight to Jewish architectural creativity in the shaping
cient Meiron, 916; NEAEHL, I, 149, 292. For the reconstruction of the interior of a synagogue, see Yeivin, Reconstruction, 26876. 6. See above, Chap. 3. 7. See Kohl and Watzinger, Antike Synagogen, 219 (followed by Krauss, Synagogale Altertmer, 33738; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, I, 181; Avi-Yonah, Synagogue Architecture, 69; and others); as well as the articles of Avigad, Foerster, and Netzer in ASR, 4251.
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of the Galilean-type synagogue, still recognizes the dominance of Greco-Roman architectural elements in these buildings (g. 96).8 The same indebtedness to contemporary architectural models holds true with respect to the plans of basilica-type Byzantine synagogues. Patterned after contemporary Christian churches, many of these synagogues featured a courtyard (atrium), tripartite entrances leading into a narthex, and then three portals into a main hall, with a nave, two side aisles, and an apse (or bima) positioned in the direction of the buildings orientation. Such borrowing is clearly attested by the adoption of the churchs chancel screen in synagogue architecture. In its Christian milieu, the chancel screen served as a parapet; built of stone slabs tted into the grooves of posts, it was intended to separate the clergy, altar, and presbyterium from the congregation. But the screen had no discernible function in the synagogue, where there was no comparable division between participants (i.e., prayer leaders, preachers, or Torah readers) and congregation (see below). Thus, the appearance of the chancel screen in a Jewish context seems to be a striking example of the incorporation of a foreign architectural element that, as far as we know, had no practical purpose within the synagogue setting. Once borrowed, however, the synagogue chancel
8. Tsafrir, Archaeology and Art, 16589.
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screen was often decorated like its Christian counterpart, but with Jewish symbols, oral and geometric decorations, and dedicatory inscriptions. Whether the synagogue chancel screen subsequently acquired its own symbolic meaning, e.g., as marking o sacred space in imitation of the Temple balustrade, is debatable.9 The same architectural dependence holds true for Diaspora synagogues as well. To the best of our knowledge, it would seem that Jewish communities built their synagogues in consonance with local tastes and regnant styles. It will be remembered that the wellestablished and highly integrated Sardis community established its monumental synagogue building on the main street of the city, in a structure that had originally been built as a wing of the local palaestra and was later converted into a civic basilica. The synagogue building that had taken shape by the fourth century was a reworking of this earlier basilica.10 In contrast, the community at Dura Europos located its far more modest synagogue on the western fringes of the city, in a private home that had been converted for communal use. Such was also the case with the nearby church and mithraeum.11 The pattern of using private homes as synagogues recurs in a number of other Diaspora communities, e.g., Priene, Stobi, and arguably Delos.12 The Dura building, whose urban surroundings have been revealed through the extensive excavations carried out in the 1930s, provides a striking example of signicant contextual inuence. The synagogue, particularly in its second phase, adopted and adapted patterns drawn from nearby pagan shrines. Its hall and courtyard, as well as series of adjacent rooms, are reminiscent of a number of Duran temples. The synagogue aedicula housing the Torah is a close approximation of Duran temple aediculae, the signicant distinction being that the former contained a Torah scroll and not the statue of a deity.13
ART
Owing to the extensive artistic remains from both Byzantine Palestine and the Diaspora, the information relating to synagogue art in Late Antiquity is rich and varied, rang9. On parallels with contemporary churches, see idem, Byzantine Setting, 14757; Vitto, Interior Decoration, 283300; Hachlili, Aspects of Similarity and Diversity, 92122; Talgam, Similarities and Dierences, 93110; Habas, Bema and Chancel Screen, 11130. See also Chiat, Synagogue and Church Architecture, 624. For a discussion of the signicance of the chancel screen in Christian and Jewish contexts, see Branham, Vicarious Sacrality, 31945; Fine, Chancel Screens, 6785. 10. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 16890; and above, Chap. 8. 11. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 733; idem, Excavations at Dura: Christian Building, 35; Perkins, Art of Dura, 2332. 12. White, Building Gods House, 60101. The Ostia synagogue seems to have had anities with local guild and collegia buildings; see above, Chap. 8. 13. Kraeling, Excavations at Dura: Synagogue, 16.
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ing from instances of slavish imitation of foreign models to those of remarkable originality. In terms of technique (mosaics, frescoes, stone moldings) and the range of motifs (oral, faunal, geometric, human), Jewish communities inherited only a limited repertoire from which to draw. Thus, outside inuence was clearly predominant. Jewish creativity often expressed itself in the selection of the motifs it adopted. Blatantly pagan representations were, for the most part, eschewed, while more neutral patterns were easily assimilated. As a result, geometric and oral patterns were especially common in synagogues, although gural representations of animals, birds, and sh were also quite ubiquitous.14 Three specic instances of artistic borrowing in synagogues of Byzantine Palestine are particularly instructive. The rst is the remarkable similarity between the mosaic oors of the synagogues in Gaza and nearby Maon (Nirim) on the one hand, and that of the Shellal church on the other, all three dating to the sixth century c.e. (gs. 9798). The sites are so close to one another geographically, and their patterns and motifs so similar (an amphora with vine tendrils anked by birds and animals, forming rows of medallions containing depictions of animate and inanimate objects), that Avi-Yonah has suggested that all three oors may have originated in the same Gazan workshop. Although this particular suggestion has met with some criticism, there is little disagreement as to the remarkable resemblance between these oors.15 The Temple facade appearing in a sixthcentury church on Mount Nebo is another example of a motif common to both the Byzantine synagogue and church. Foerster has suggested that the artisan of the synagogue at Susiya in southern Judaea may have borrowed the architectural representation of the facade from this church (or, we may add, from a common pattern book).16 Finally, Bregman has argued persuasively that the ram motif in the Aqedah scene of the Bet Alpha synagogue was borrowed from a Christian exemplar; the hanging ram was originally intended as a preguration of Jesus on the cross.17 However, not all borrowing can be viewed as a judicious selection of more or less neutral motifs, and several have had an unsettling eect when rst discovered. Such was the
14. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, VVIII, passim; B. Narkiss, Pagan, Christian and Jewish Elements, 18388; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and ArchaeologyIsrael, 199382; Ovadiah, Art of the Ancient Synagogues, 30118; Foerster, Allegorical and Symbolic Motifs, 54552. See also M. Smith, Image of God, 473512. 15. Avi-Yonah, Art in Ancient Palestine, 38995; idem, Mosaic Pavement of the Maon Synagogue, 2535; Hachlili, On the Gaza School of Mosaicists, 4658; eadem, Ancient Jewish Art and Archaeology Israel, 31016; eadem, Menorah, 25162; N. Stone, Notes on the Shellal Mosaic, 20714; Ovadiah, Mosaic Workshop, 36772. 16. Foerster, Allegorical and Symbolic Motifs, 54552. For other examples from Byzantine Palestine, see Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 8992. 17. Bregman, Riddle of the Ram, 12745, esp. 14044. For further discussion of Jewish-Christian parallels, see the articles by Talgam and Habas in L. Levine and Z. Weiss, From Dura to Sepphoris.
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case with the mosaics in the House of Leontis at Bet Shean, which bear scenes from Homers Odyssey, a depiction of Alexandria, and a Nilotic scene featuring a semiclad god of the Nile. To date, it is still an open question whether the Leontis hall was part of a Jewish private home, a communal building complex, orless likelya synagogue hall.18 Another extensively discussed instance is the Helios-zodiac motif;19 here, too, indebtedness to Greco-Roman models is unquestionable. In fact, one can readily assert that, with the exception of a limited number of distinctly Jewish symbols (see below), all the artistic motifs and styles in the ancient synagogues of Palestine and the Diaspora were in one way or another borrowed from the surrounding culture. As was the case with the architectural dimension, Jewish culture never developed an independent artistic tradition from which the communities of Late Antiquity might
18. Foerster, Allegorical and Symbolic Motifs, 54750; Hachlili, Ancient Jewish Art and Archaeology Israel, 301; Roussin, Beit Leontis Mosaic, 619. 19. See above, Chap. 17.
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draw. When it came to gural representations, the three or so centuries (the mid second century b.c.e. through the second century c.e.) of Jewish aniconic art left later generations without even a minimal repertoire. Biblical scenes within the synagogue context were likewise heavily indebted to non-Jewish paradigms when it came to their form and style of representation. The convergence of Jewish and non-Jewish elements is nowhere more vividly expressed than in synagogue art. As noted above, the varieties and permutations of motifs are as numerous as the number of synagogues themselves. We have had occasion to note that Palestinian communities, ironically, appear to have been more liberal in their use of pagan motifs than their Diaspora counterparts (the zodiac, as mentioned, never appears in Diaspora synagogues). Yet even within Palestine, signs of conservatism and liberalism in art forms are also discerniblenot only between dierent regions of the country but also among synagogues in the same urban setting.20 In light of archaeological data, rabbinic sources aord some insight into the dramatic changes in artistic expression that occurred within Jewish society, changes that were clearly wrought under the inuence and attraction of foreign models. One of the most revealing sources in this regardwhich we have already had occasion to citedescribes the reactions of several rabbis to the progressive introduction of gural representation into Jewish society:
In the days of R. Yoanan [third century], they began to depict [gural images] on the walls and he did not object; in the days of R. Abun [fourth century], they began depicting [gural images] on mosaic oors and he did not object.21
The widespread introduction of gural representations on mosaic oors throughout the East followed the above-noted pattern; the fourth century witnessed the increased use of
20. See above, Chaps. 7 and 9. 21. Y Avodah Zarah 3, 3, 42d; and Genizah fragment published in J. N. Epstein, Studies in Talmudic Literature, II, 25152. See also above, Chap. 13.
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such depictions on mosaic oors in civic and private buildings, a process that had begun already a century or two beforehand. The Jews were clearly following suit, as both literary and archaeological sources attest to the penetration of Greco-Roman artistic patterns into Jewish society generally, and into the synagogue in particular. If we are able to trace synagogue decorations in Palestine to pagan and Christian models, the situation in the Diaspora is even clearer. Given the sometimes substantial amount of comparative material from the synagogues immediate surroundings, we can condently assert that synagogue decoration invariably reected the styles and patterns of its immediate context.22 The mosaics in the Elche synagogue, for example, are similar to those in Roman villas in the region. The dierent building styles used over the centuries in Roman Ostia, i.e., opus reticulatum, opus vittatum, and opus listatum, are evidenced in the local synagogues walls and provide, inter alia, valuable evidence for dating. The Naro mosaics feature motifs common in Roman Africa.23 The plethora of articles and books written on Dura Europos have made clear the extent to which synagogue wall decorations were indebted to Parthian, Roman, and local Syrian artistic traditions. While Rostovtze emphasized Parthian art, and Goodenough the Roman parallels, Moon has suggested that Roman commemorative art was a decisive factor in shaping synagogue paintings.24 While Gates highlights the Syro-Mesopotamian context, Perkins focuses mainly on the Duran contextthe towns temples, mithraeum, church, and private housesto explain the synagogues art.25 Having delineated the salient characteristics of local Duran art, Perkins then attempts to trace the wider artistic strands that have gone into this particular series of representations:
In summary, the Durene style in painting and relief is characterized by frontal, twodimensional, static, schematically drawn gures set in the available space with little or no meaningful visual connection. Costumes, coiures, attributes, and poses are drawn from the repertoires of Greece, Rome, Iran, and Western Asia; and it is the amalgam of these varied elements which is the major identifying feature of the style. . . . The style of the Durene paintings and sculptures, then, is fundamentally an Asiatic one, with an admixture of Western elements which the local artists adapt and combine to suit their own tastes. . . . While there are specic motifs and formal elements in Durene art which are found nowhere else
22. See above, Chap. 4. 23. See above, Chap. 8. On the inuence of North African mosaics in the East generally, see Dunbabin, Mosaics of Roman North Africa, 22233; and on the mosaics of Roman Sepphoris in this regard, see Roussin, Birds and Fishes, 125. 24. Rostovtze, Dura and the Problem of Parthian Art, 155301; Goodenough, Jewish Symbols, IX, 12474, inter alia; and Moon, Nudity and Narrative, 58990: This paper will identify in the paintings some Graeco-Roman conventions of representation and arrangement which a patron or group of planners manipulated more or less intentionally to facilitate narrative comprehension and to advertise by way of comparison their own commitment to God and status within the congregation itself. 25. Gates, Dura-Europos, 16681; Perkins, Art of Dura, 3369.
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and may well be Durene in origin . . . it is the combination of disparate features which is the major characteristic of the Durene style.26
The evidence from Sardis is likewise self-evident in this regard. The very location of the synagogue, in what was formerly a civic basilica next to the citys palaestra, is indicative of the Jews comfortableness in the Sardis environment. The synagogue mosaics and revetments are similar to those found elsewhere in the city. Especially noteworthy is the eagle table in the synagogues nave, presumably used for the reading of the Torah. Next to this table, it will be remembered, were two pairs of stone lions, and outside the synagogue atrium was a massive Lydian lion (or perhaps pair of lions, as inside the synagogue). Just as the eagle was, among other things, a symbol of Rome, so, too, was the lion a gure that loomed large in Sardis mythology.27 The accessibility of non-Jewish workshops for the creation of synagogue decorations facilitated Jewish dependency upon pagan and Christian models. This appears to have been a common occurrence in many areas boasting a mixed population. We have noted this possibility above with respect to the synagogues of Gaza and Maon (Nirim); Rutgers has argued persuasively that Jewish and Christian art and artifacts in fourth- and fthcentury Rome owe much to common local workshops, and that this nds expression in the plans and decorations of catacombs and hypogea and in the types of sarcophagi, gold glass, lamps, and amulets found there.28
COMMUNAL CENTER
We have noted above that Diaspora synagogues functioned as community centers and were often referred to in terms used for contemporary Greco-Roman associations.29 Here, too, whenever comparative material is available, parallels from the immediate milieu reveal the assimilation of outside inuences. In Egypt, for example, such inuences found expression in the various components of the proseuche complex, as well as in the Ptolemaic practice of dedicating buildings to a king and queen. Not only do the Cyrene synagogue inscriptions contain names typical of the region, but two of them refer to the synagogue as an amphitheater and speak of voting processes and bestowing honors characteristic of Roman society.
26. Perkins, Art of Dura, 117, 126. 27. Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 18485; Kraabel, Paganism and Judaism, 24246. 28. Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, 5099. It would seem that not a few Byzantine workshops for producing oil lamps and glass jars served both Christians and Jews; crosses appear on the same types of objects on which menorot were found. See Y. Israeli, Light of the Menorah, 139, 143; Barag, Glass Pilgrim Vessels (1), 3563; ibid. (2), 4563. 29. See above, Chap. 4.
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Close ties, often mutual, between Jews and their surroundings are evident in several inscriptions; Jews participated in the life of the city, and members of the general community took part in activities of the Jewish community. The Julia Severa inscription highlights the contribution made by a prominent Acmonian to the local synagogue, and an inscription from fourth-century Panticapaeum in the Bosphorus indicates that the synagogue was built by a high Imperial ocial. In Olbia, another Bosphoran city, the local proseuche was repaired by the citys archons,30 and non-Jewish participation in Jewish community aairs is dramatically expressed in the Aphrodisias inscription. Jewish involvement in civic life is reected in the many Sardis inscriptions, which refer to members of the community as Sardianoi (citizens of Sardis), bouleutes (members of the city council), comes, and procurator (both Imperial oces).31 A number of rst-century c.e. Bosphoran communities have left us manumission agreements similar to those found in second-century b.c.e. Delphi and elsewhere.32 In the Bosphoran examples, not only was the proseuche the venue of these ceremonies, but the congregation served on occasion as an ocial signatory of the transaction. These documents of manumission are similar to pagan ones known from the Greek world; Westermann lists seven ways in which these Jewish manumission documents and procedures follow those of the Greeks: (1) the manumission itself, for the release of any slave, especially a non-Jew, was not acknowledged by Jewish law; (2) the language, terminology, and sequence of clauses in these documents; (3) the form of the documents as consecrations; (4) the continuation by the freed slave of some part of his (or her) former service; (5) an oath naming Zeus, the earth, and the sun; (6) assent to the new status by heirs of the former owner; and (7) the use of three cardinal clauses: legal freedom (eleutheria), no unwarranted seizure or harassment, and unhampered travel.33 In another vein, one of the social functions of synagogues, like pagan temples, was to serve as a place for dining and banqueting. Temples served this purpose not only if the meal was part of some sort of religious context, but even if it was purely secular in nature. As a result, professional, social, and religious associations often used these premises for such activities; the many rooms surrounding the courtyards of Duran temples appear to have been used for banqueting. Evidence from Hellenistic-Roman Egypt and Ostia, as well as inscriptions from Stobi and Caesarea and several rabbinic traditions, points to similar usage in synagogues.34
30. Levinskaya, Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 11314. 31. Kroll, Greek Inscriptions, 5051; Seager and Kraabel, Synagogue and the Jewish Community, 184. 32. Bosphoran Kingdom: Levinskaya, Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, 23142. Delphi: Frey, CIJ, I, nos. 709 11. Egypt: Tcherikover et al., CPJ, III, no. 473. 33. Westermann, Slave Systems, 125. 34. See C. Roberts et al., Gild of Zeus, 7287; and above, Chaps. 4, 8, and 10.
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INSCRIPTIONS
Epigraphical data likewise make clear the extent to which the synagogue was attuned to the dominant norms of the surrounding culture. This is expressed rst and foremost in the language of the inscriptions, which, with rare exceptions in the Diaspora and only in a small minority of cases in Palestine, was the dominant language of the region Greek and Latin in the West, Greek and Aramaic in the East (g. 99). Moreover, with the exception of rural Palestine and Dura, names of synagogue donors are overwhelmingly Greek.35 The titles of synagogue ocials were almost always taken from the Greek. Whether we encounter an archisynagogue, archon, prostates, pater or mater synagoges, or phrontistes, Jewish usage often correlates with the titles used by the non-Jews in the same area.36 Furthermore, the dedicatory formulas, much like the manumission declarations, are patterned after current pagan and Christian models. The Greek May he be remembered
35. Rabin, Hebrew and Aramaic, 100739; Mussies, Greek in Palestine and the Diaspora, 1040 64; E. M. Meyers and Strange, Archaeology, Rabbis and Christianity, 6291; van der Horst, Ancient Jewish Epitaphs, 2239. 36. See above, Chap. 11.
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is found in pagan and Christian inscriptions, while the Aramaic equivalent, May so-andso be remembered for good ( ,) is recurrent in Syrian and Nabataean Aramaic inscriptions.37
LITURGY
There can be little question that the Jews of the Diaspora worshipped in the vernacular, although evidence in this regard is largely inferential. Some prayers with a seemingly Jewish orientation have been preserved in early church documents, although we cannot be certain that their provenance was synagogue liturgy.38 Clear-cut evidence for the use of Greek is preserved in Justinians famous Novella 146 from 553 c.e., where it is stated that Jews read the Torah in the vernacular, primarily in Greek:
We decree, therefore, that it shall be permitted to those Hebrews who want it to read the Holy Books in their synagogues and, in general, in any place where there are Hebrews, in the Greek language before those assembled and comprehending, or possibly in our ancestral language (we speak of the Italian language), or simply in all the other languages, changing language and reading according to the dierent places; and that through this reading the matters read shall become clear to all those assembled and comprehending, and that they shall live and act according to them. We also order that there shall be no license to the commentators they have, who employ the Hebrew language to falsify it at their will, covering their own malignity by the ignorance of the many. Furthermore, those who read in Greek shall use the Septuagint tradition, which is more accurate than all the others, and is preferable to the others particularly in reason of what happened while the translation was made, that although they divided by twos, and though they translated in dierent places, nevertheless they presented one version.39
Rabbinic literature as well has preserved some evidence in this regard, although it is uncertain how much of it applies to the Diaspora setting, rather than to the more hellenized parts of Roman Palestine. One source specically addresses itself to a congregation reciting prayers in a language other than Hebrew: In a synagogue of non-Hebrew [probably Greek] speakers [ ,]if there is someone among them who can read [the Torah] in Hebrew, he should commence and conclude in Hebrew [reading the middle part in Greek so that the congregation can understand]. 40 Tannaitic material is quite clear in
37. Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, 89; Foerster, Synagogue Inscriptions, 1822, 3740. On some similarities and dierences between Jewish and non-Jewish dedicatory inscriptions, see Rajak, Benefactors, 30519. 38. On Diaspora prayers, see Charlesworth, Jewish Hymns, Odes and Prayers, 41136; Darnell and Fiensy, Hellenistic Synagogal Prayers, 67197; and esp. Fiensy, Prayers Alleged to Be Jewish. 39. Linder, Jews in Roman Imperial Legislation, 408. See also A. Baumgarten, Justinian and the Jews, 3744; de Lange, Hebrew Language, 13234. 40. T Megillah 3:13 (p. 356); and Lieberman, TK, V, 117980.
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its assertion that the important components of Jewish liturgy may be recited in any language (though it was not desirable, according to some rabbis), and this passage seems to be referring at least to Greek.41 The Yerushalmi, it will be recalled, preserves a most revealing anecdote about two rabbis who, around the beginning of the fourth century c.e., entered a Caesarean synagogue where Jews were reciting the most basic of prayersthe Shemain Greek. Astounded by this scene, one sage wished to stop the entire service, while the other replied that it was preferable for the congregation to recite these prayers in Greek than not at all.42 There can be little question that in synagogues such as this one, sermons and the expounding of the Scriptures were likewise rendered in Greek.43 Although Greek successfully penetrated synagogue worship in the hellenized centers of the Diaspora and Palestine, it does not appear to have played any kind of role in the worship context of either the Galilee or Babylonia, at least as far as rabbinic sources are concerned. However, it is impossible to gauge to what degree this material reects contemporary practice. Everything in this literature seems to indicate that prayer was conducted, and some sermons were delivered, in Hebrew, although the latter may have been presented in an academy setting or may be merely literary creations. The most signicant evidence for the importance of Aramaic in the liturgy is the targum, which was used in many, if not most, Palestinian synagogues throughout Late Antiquity. There can be no more eloquent testimony regarding the linguistic state of Jewish society in both Palestine and Babylonia than the need for translations of the Scriptures into Aramaic.44 A few Aramaic prayers, at least one of which eventually became central to the liturgical context (i.e., the Qaddish), were incorporated into the service, and Aramaic piyyutim were being composed in Byzantine Palestine alongside the more predominant Hebrew compositions.45 Many midrashim have been preserved in Aramaic, and some of this material may have been delivered initially in the form of a sermon in a synagogue setting. A further aspect of Jewish worship relates not to the language, but to its form. How much of Jewish worship in Late Antiquity was derived directly from Jewish precedents, and how much was a product of outside inuences? Since synagogue liturgy did not crystallize until the Roman-Byzantine era, many of its forms, and perhaps its content, may
41. M Sotah 7, 1; T Sotah 7, 7 (pp. 19293). 42. Y Sotah 7, 1, 21b. 43. The inuence of Greek on the pronunciation of Hebrew prayers in various towns and cities of Late Roman Palestine is corroborated by interesting textual and archaeological evidence. According to the Yerushalmi, for instance, people from Bet Shean, Haifa, and Tivon were not qualied to serve as prayer leaders because their pronunciation was faulty. The mistakes noted also appear in a Bet Shean synagogue inscription (Y Berakhot 2, 4, 4d; Naveh, On Stone and Mosaic, no. 47). 44. For a very dierent view of the function of Aramaic targumim in the synagogue, cf. Fraade, Rabbinic Views on the Practice of Targum, 25386. 45. On Aramaic prayers, piyyutim, and targumic material, see Shinan, Hebrew and Aramaic, 224 32; Sokolo and Yahalom, Aramaic Piyyutim, 30921.
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have been inuenced by the wider religious context. Inuence in this case might have taken one of several directions: adopting a foreign worship component (an unlikely occurrence); borrowing a well-known mode of expression but utilizing traditional material; or being stimulated by outside models but creating something entirely new. Surveying the many components of Jewish worship, some appear to be uniquely Jewish in origin, while others may well have derived from external sources. The former category is represented by the Torah reading and its accompanying study. This, as noted, was the earliest and most unique form of Jewish worship. While it is true that there are sporadic indications of the study and recital of sacred texts in temples and other pagan religious contexts, such activity usually involved priests or, at most, a limited coterie of initiates. Nowhere in the ancient world is there evidence that the primary mode of religious expression for an entire community was this type of reading and study of sacred texts performed on a regular basis.46 The church comes closest to this model, but in this particular case, it appears to have been inuenced by the synagogue. At the other end of the spectrum are liturgical forms reecting some sort of outside inuence, such as the piyyut, which became part of the synagogues liturgical repertoire by the fth or sixth century. This was an entirely new element in synagogue worship, and those who account for its origins on the sole basis of earlier Jewish genres (prayer, sermon, or poetry) are hard put to explain how it evolved into the piyyut precisely in these centuries.47 In the nal analysis, the evidence seems to point primarily in one direction, i.e., the inuence of contemporary Christian practice. It was at this time that the church was introducing a similar liturgical feature into its worship settings. Ephrem and Romanus were pioneers in this regard, and certain similarities to their liturgical pieces have been detected in early Jewish piyyut.48 The fact that this liturgical form appeared in the synagogue context at this time, that the same term is used for this genre (the Hebrew piyyut, deriving from the Greek or , and the Hebrew paytan from the Greek ),
46. Momigliano, On Pagans, Jews and Christians, 8991. On study and learning within pagan religious contexts, see Griths, Egypt and the Rise of the Synagogue, 714; MacMullen, Paganism, 1012. 47. See, for example, Z. M. Rabinowitz, Halakha and Aggada, 1223; Mirsky, Piyyut, 176. See, however, Fleischer (Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 6397), who discounts any substantial outside inuence on the development of this genre. 48. Schirmann, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 12361; Werner, Sacred Bridge, I, 21246; Yahalom, Piyyut as Poetry, 11126. See the careful distinction made by Werner (Sacred Bridge, I, 246) on this subject: Concerning the interchange of ideas, it may be said that Syrian, Byzantine and Armenian hymnody unfolded from a nucleus of Hebrew style and conceptions; the Byzantine and Syrian hymns show even faint traces of early rabbinic ideas. But stylistically and poetically, the Synagogue learned more from the old Oriental Churches and their poetry, since Judaism admitted hymnody only at a time when it was already well developed in Christianity. See also Mitsakis, Language of Romanos, passim; and Werners fascinating discussion of the parallel (possibly Byzantine) between the Jewish High Holiday prayer Unetaneh toqef and the Christian Dies irae (Sacred Bridge, I, 25255).
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that similarities in formal characteristics (meter, acrostic, and rhyme), style, content, and use of choruses appear in both, and that these similarities arose in the context of Jewish borrowing of church architectural, artistic, and even epigraphical patterns, as noted above, are powerful arguments for claiming Jewish adoption and adaptation of this Byzantine church model.49 The fact that most piyyutim are in Hebrew and that their themes derive from the Bible and midrashim should not be surprising.50 This reects the creative process of borrowing (as against slavish imitation) characteristic of cultural transmission generally. As a result of these dynamics, a new liturgical form was created that has become an integral part of Jewish worship (in varying degrees, depending on the wider cultural context) from Late Antiquity down to the present. Between these polar examplesTorah reading on the one hand and piyyut on the other lie the other elements of Jewish worship. As we have seen, communal prayer, which had become a basic component of Palestinian Jewish worship in the post-70 era, is an intriguing and as yet enigmatic phenomenon with regard to its Jewish and possibly nonJewish roots. Jewish communal prayer was negligible in the biblical era, and even at the end of the Second Temple period it was quite peripheral to the daily ritual of the Jerusalem Temple. Whereas Torah reading was an early component of synagogue ritual, and piyyut was a late liturgical development, communal prayer seems to have rst appeared in the Hellenistic Diaspora (to wit, the term proseuche, place of prayer) and was included in the Palestinian synagogue worship context only later on.51 Therefore, questions of how and why such developments took place are quite natural. As noted above (Chap. 16), there seems to be little doubt that regular communal prayer developed in post-70 c.e. Roman Palestine in order to ll the vacuum created by the destruction of the Temple. It has usually been assumed that the Amidah incorporated a range of earlier traditionsprivate and public, literary and oral. Thus, although scholars have attempted to isolate liturgical patterns or clusters of ideas of pre-70 vintage that are reminiscent of later rabbinic prayer formulations, only a few have paid attention to the wider context and its possible role in such a process. In the Greco-Roman era, organized prayer and the recital of hymns were well-recognized components of pagan temple worship. Morning prayers were oered in the temple of Dionysius in Teos and those of Asclepius in Athens and Pergamum. Often such worship settings would include professional singers, choruses, and instrumental accompaniment, as well as the use of incense during the recitation of the prayers and hymns.52 In
49. Interestingly, religious poetry among the Samaritans likewise makes its rst appearance as early as the fourth century; see J. A. Cohen, Samaritan Chronicle, 6869; MacDonald, Theology of the Samaritans, 26, 43; Crown, Samaritan Religion, 43. 50. For an emphasis on the unique aspects of the piyyut genre, viewing it almost exclusively in diachronic terms, see Fleischer, Early Hebrew Liturgical Poetry, 6397. 51. See above, Chaps. 5 and 16. 52. Nilsson, Pagan Divine Service, 6369; MacMullen, Paganism, 1617, 149 n. 78.
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a short but provocative article, M. Smith has suggested that many Jewish prayers praising God in abstract, otherworldly terms that include a string of epithets reect a Hellenistic prayer mode. This type of prayer stands in contrast to the earlier, Deuteronomic form of prayer, which focused on the historical dimension.53 Moreover, several studies on the two basic Jewish prayersthe Shema and the Amidahhave suggested that the form and content of each might well have been inuenced by Hellenistic patterns. Regarding the former, Knohl has noted that the Shema prayer and its accompanying blessings were selected, structured, and recited much as were Hellenistic royal decrees, with their acclamatio, antiphony, and emphasis on observing the kings commands.54 With regard to the Amidah, Bickerman has opined that the source of many of its themes was originally the daily civic prayers oered in Hellenistic cities, and possibly in Jerusalem as well.55 With regard to Late Antiquity, Werner has noted a number of striking parallels between Christian and Jewish liturgy. These include not only the reading and study of the Scriptures, but various prayer forms such as psalms, hymns, and the doxology.56 Besides the prayer mode, actual instruction through discourses, sermons, and more general expositions was also known in pagan contexts. Such expositions, possibly of a more popular or theological nature, were to be found both in pagan temple settings and among various religious associations. As we have already noted, synagogue worship of the pre-70 era had already highlighted this component.57 Whether the sermon in the ancient synagogue was indebted in any way to its pagan counterpart is impossible to assess at present. All substantive literary material regarding Jewish practice in this regard is relatively late, deriving from Late Antiquity, while pagan evidence is, at best, meager.
SANCTITY
A prominent feature of the synagogue in Late Antiquity was the sanctity now attributed to it. As we have seen, this sacred dimension was not inherent in the synagogue, which at rst had been a neutral communal institution par excellence. The impetus for
53. M. Smith, On the Ysr, 8795. 54. Knohl, Parasha, 1131. 55. Bickerman, Civic Prayer, 16385; see also Baers rather speculative theory regarding the inuence of Greek prayer on the Amidah as early as the Hellenistic period (Israel among the Nations, 32 36). For an interesting though also somewhat speculative proposal regarding the inuence of a JewishChristian blessing on Jewish liturgy, see Liebes, Mazmia Qeren Yeshuah, 31348. In the same vein, Yuval (Haggadah, 528) has suggested that much of the seder ritual is a result of rabbinic reactions to the Jewish-Christian Passover celebration. 56. Werner, Sacred Bridge, passim. Cf. also Markus, End of Ancient Christianity, 2122. 57. Regarding the pagans, see above, note 46. On such activities in a synagogue setting, see, for example, Luke 4:2021; Acts 13:15; Philo, On Moses 2, 215; idem, Hypothetica 7, 13. See also Wills, Form of the Sermon, 27799; Black II, Rhetorical Form of the Sermon, 118; and above, Chap. 5.
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sacred status rst appeared in the Diaspora synagogue and apparently came in response to a variety of needs and especially to the desire for an enhanced self-identity and selfimage to counterbalance the ubiquitous pagan temple and other reminders of pagan worship. This might also explain why Diaspora Jews tended to call their central communal building by a religious term, proseuche (place of prayer), instead of synagoge (place of assembly), which was generally used in Second Temple Judaea. The fact that many Hellenistic temples (and cities) were acquiring the title holy and inviolable may have also contributed to this Diaspora phenomenon.58 The emergence of the Palestinian synagogues sanctity, however, is a complex issue. On the one hand, one could easily ascribe its growing sacredness to the desire for some sort of continuity following the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple. As the synagogue began to incorporate more and more religious practices and symbols, particularly those associated with the Temple, a holy status might have evolved quite naturally. Several other developments undoubtedly contributed to this sacrality, as, for example, the permanent presence of Torah scrolls within most synagogues and the gradual institutionalization of communal prayer as an integral part of synagogue worship (with the concomitant need for a Jerusalem orientation in the main hall).59 However, it is also possible that the incorporation of the above practices may have been the result, and not the cause, of synagogue sanctity. The above changes in the synagogues interior design may not be sucient to account for the ever-increasing sanctity of the Palestinian synagogue. Together with these internal factors, it should be borne in mind that many pagan and Christian ideologies and worship settings were also moving in this direction in Late Antiquity. Holiness as a religious category characterizing place, people, and objects was now becoming a major concern in many religious circles.60 The Jews of Palestine must have been aware of the intensive Christian interest in the countrys holy places, beginning with Constantines building of churches in Jerusalem.61 Might these developments have in any way inuenced their attitude toward the synagogue? As we have already had occasion to note,62 Byzantine synagogues clearly owed a great deal to their Christian counterparts, both externally and internally. With the dramatic penetration of Christianity into Byzantine Palestine in the fourth century, and into the Galilee in the fth and sixth centuries,63 the Jews may have felt the need to respond, inter alia, by endowing their central religious institution with an aura of sanctity, thereby countering the construction of sacred buildings under Chris58. See Rigsby, Asylia, 129. 59. See above, Chap. 6; and esp. Fine, This Holy Place, 6194. 60. See, for example, Brown, Society and the Holy; Wilken, Land Called Holy; Walker, Holy City, Holy Places?; and above, Chap. 7. 61. Wilken, Land Called Holy, 82100; Tsafrir, Development of Ecclesiastical Architecture, 116; Wilkinson, Constantinian Churches, 2327. 62. See above, Chap. 7. 63. Aviam, Christian Galilee, 281300; Bar, Christianisation of Rural Palestine, 40121.
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tian auspices. The appearance of Jewish symbols and biblical motifs in synagogues may also have served a similar function. Such contextual factors undoubtedly contributed to the creation of a sacred dimension in the Byzantine synagogue and in transforming the institution into a diminished Temple (46.)
DEGREES OF HELLENIZATION
The wealth of synagogue data thus aords the opportunity to make a number of interesting distinctions regarding the question of hellenization. In the rst place, one is struck by the sheer variety of artistic and architectural forms found in ancient synagogues. As noted above, synagogues in the more remote areas of Byzantine Palestine were clearly less aected by outside inuences (e.g., En Gedi), while urban Jewish communities were generally more cosmopolitan than their rural counterparts. Thus, there is less evidence of hellenization (e.g., the use of Greek or gural representations) in the Upper Galilee, as opposed to the Lower Galilee, or in southern Judaea and the Golan, in contrast to Jewish communities in the large hellenized cities along the coast of Roman Palestine.65 All inscriptions from the coastal area, for example, are in Greek, and thus the story of the Caesarea congregation reciting the Shema in that language should not at all be surprising. Similarly, the synagogues discovered in Sepphoris and Tiberias, the two large Jewish urban centers of the Lower Galilee, were hellenized in a number of signicant ways, not the least of which was the use of the zodiac and mostly Greek inscriptions.66 We must be careful, nevertheless, not to overstate the case. While urban Jews were generally more inclined toward cosmopolitanism than those living in rural settings, there were nevertheless many dierent types of synagogues within the cities. Some congregations tended to be more conservative and less inclined to incorporate cosmopolitan modes of expression, while others were more receptive to outside inuences. We have already had occasion to note the diversity among the sixth-century synagogues in the Bet Shean area, and this holds true for synagogues within the same geographical region, such as those in Jericho and nearby Naaran.67
633
plete picture of the nature and character of this institution, it is important to take note of the synagogues uniquely Jewish dimensions. While most synagogue architecture followed the regnant styles of the time, there are some notable instances of both independence and creative adaptation in this domain. One striking example of the former is in the orientation of the synagogue, which diered from that of other contemporary religious buildings. Whereas pagan temples and Christian churches invariably faced eastward, synagogues located outside of Israel were oriented toward the Holy Land and those located within Israel toward Jerusalem. This norm, which was undoubtedly based on biblical verses noting that prayer was to be directed toward Jerusalem, may have been liberally interpreted at times, but rarely ignored.68 The creative use of pagan models is evident in the internal layout of the Galilean synagogues, with benches and columns usually on three (in the smaller buildings, only two) sides and the focus on the fourth wall, facing Jerusalem. This internal plan is sui generis. Roman basilicas had either two or four rows of columns; the use of three rows of columns, with the fourth side serving as the focus of the worship service, is characteristic of Galilean synagogues, although it may be seen in several Nabatean temple courtyards and in some Byzantine churches in Syria as well.69 Independence and creative adaptation may also be discerned in artistic representation. We nd the uniquely Jewish symbols (lulav, ethrog, shofar, and incense shovel) ubiquitous, both individually and collectively, among communities throughout Byzantine Palestine and the Diaspora. The menorah was especially popular and appears in a wide range of sizes and shapes, including three-dimensional representations. Examples of the creative use of borrowed patterns include a design such as the zodiac, which, while adopted from pagan precedents, was given a centrality and importance in Byzantine synagogues that were unmatched in contemporary Byzantine settings. In the use of religious motifs on mosaic oors, about which we are best informed, Jewish and Christian practices in the Byzantine period appear to have been moving in opposite directions. While Christians increasingly avoided the depiction of religious scenes or symbols on their oors (use of the cross in this context was ocially banned in 427),70 Jews did not. Throughout this period, in fourth-century ammat Tiberias, fth-century Sepphoris, and sixth-century Bet Alpha alike, Jewish symbols and representations of holy artifacts (e.g., the Torah shrine), as well as biblical scenes and characters, were to be found in diverse combinations on mosaic oors throughout Palestine. Interestingly, as already noted, such depictions on oors are not the norm in contemporary Diaspora synagogues. Perhaps these communities were inuenced by Christian norms in this regard.71
68. See above, Chap. 9. 69. Foerster, Ancient Synagogues of the Galilee, 289319; idem, Art and Architecture, 13946. 70. Despite this ocial ban, crosses continue to appear on church mosaic oors, especially in rural districts, such as the western Upper Galilee. 71. For Christians, the cross was clearly becoming a more important and sacred symbol, becoming
634 t h e s y n a g o g u e a s a n i n s t i t u t i o n
Another area of unique Jewish expression was to be found in the way Jewish liturgy functioned within the synagogue setting. In Late Antiquity, the synagogue oered a very dierent architectural-liturgical model from that prevalent in Byzantine Christianity. The focus in the Byzantine church was almost exclusively on the altar and apse area (presbyterium), which by the fth century was augmented by two anking rooms: the diaconicon, a dressing room for ociants as well as a place for votive oerings, and the prothesis, where the Eucharist was prepared. The clergy generally remained in the apse area, and it was from there that the Eucharist was oered. Although customs and architecture varied among churches in dierent regions, the navewith its ambo and soleagenerally played a secondary role in this liturgy.72 In this regard, the contemporary synagogue appears to have been quite dierent.73 Synagogue liturgy was usually not concentrated in any one area in the main hall, but rather spread over several foci throughout the nave, each reserved for a specic mode of worship: the Torah ark was placed against the wall facing Jerusalem, the prayer leader (and presumably the paytan) stood on the oor of the nave before the ark, and the Torahreading ceremony appears to have taken place either on the bima in the front of the hall or in its center. The priestly blessing was oered from the front of the hall, but the targum and perhaps sermon were delivered near or on the bima, where the Torah was read. The focus thus shifted from center to front center and to the Jerusalem wall, depending on which component of Jewish worship was then taking place. The Byzantine churchs seemingly strict division between various groups within the congregation, i.e., clergy, laymen, laywomen, catechumens, and penitents, was unknown in the ancient synagogue, and the Byzantine synagogue remained much more congregational in orientation. The emphasis within the Byzantine church on the hierarchical sanctication of space was shared only very partially, if at all, by the contemporary synagogue, and Jewish worship was far more participatory than its Christian counterpart.
intimately tied with the divinity of Jesus as well as acquiring a host of other associations. Besides, with the lavish outlays of money for artistic decoration in many churches, there were other options open to Christian communities for depicting this symbol, as, for example, on walls and apses. On the Jewish side, however, other than the art from Dura, we know very little about depictions in other parts of the synagogue besides the mosaic oors. If, indeed, the mosaic oor was the primary vehicle for artistic expression for Jews, then the increasing use of symbols there clearly reects the needs of these communities to have such representations in front of them, both for aesthetic reasons and, of more consequence, for religious edication and inspiration. There can be little question that the triumphant presence of Christianity in the Holy Land proved unsettling for some (many?) Jews, creating the need for symbols of rearmation and self-identity. See also L. Levine, History and Signicance of the Menorah, 14953. 72. Mathews, Early Churches, 10537. 73. See above, Chap. 9.
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CONCLUSIONS
The study of the ancient synagogue thus oers a rich and variegated panorama of the evolution of a central Jewish institution in the Roman-Byzantine world. The large number of archaeological remains, together with the rich trove of literary references, afford a nuanced appraisal of the creative encounter between Judaism and Hellenism.74 It is hard to imagine another subject besides the synagogue oering such a detailed and comprehensive view of this phenomenon, in both Diaspora and Palestinian settings, in urban as well as rural areas, and in both the external and the internal physical features of the institution. The hellenizing component in certain aspects of the ancient synagogue was pervasive; in others, it was markedly ancillary. Even within a given area, the degree of inuence diered from one community to another and from one component of the institution to another. On the other hand, the Jewish component of the synagogue, architecturally, artistically, and liturgically, likewise found expression, but was rarely the same in any two places. If diversity was a hallmark among the synagogues in Late Antiquity, then this was largely owing to the dierent ways in which each community related to the models and inuences from the outside world.75 Nevertheless, with all this diversity, the elements that bound these communities were no less substantial and found expression (in varying degrees) in every aspect of the synagogue, from the architectural to the artistic, the liturgical to the epigraphic, the communal functions to the nature of its leadership. For a millennium, Jews found themselves in the vortex of those ancient cultures that composed the Greco-Roman and Byzantine worlds. The oikumene of that era was indeed multifaceted, though the Greek tradition, mediated by the Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine worlds, remained dominant. The thrust of the discussion in the present chapter has been to transcend an oversimplication of the question: Hellenismyes or no? This issue, which was of interest to scholars a generation or two ago, ought now be regarded as settled; contact between Jews and the outside world was ongoing, often intensive and invariably fruitful. Like other peoples living under Roman and Byzantine domination, the Jews could not remain impervious to the cultural, social, political, and economic forces at work throughout the Empire, and they reacted to them in various ways: by choosing suitable features for incorporation into their own culture, adopting regnant patterns without giving much thought to selectivity, or simply rejecting elements as foreign and undesirable. But whatever their reaction, Hellenism served at all times as a stimulant and goad, and even the act of rejection often created new and unforeseen realities. Moreover, in not a few instances, Hellenistic models served to enhance particularistic developments.
74. For a fuller treatment of this subject, see L. Levine, Judaism and Hellenism. 75. Such inuences are evident in other aspects of Jewish life as well; see, for example, Rutgers, Jews in Late Ancient Rome, passim; Williams, Organisation, 173, 17778. See also the nicely nuanced presentation regarding the Jews of Sicily in Rutgers, Interaction and Its Limits, 24556.
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In this respect, Bowersock has proposed a useful formulation in noting that through its wide range of cultural expression in art, language, and thought, Hellenism oered the East an extraordinarily exible medium of both cultural and religious expression. It was a medium not necessarily antithetical to local and indigenous traditions. On the contrary, it provided a new and more eloquent way of giving voice to them. 76
76. Bowersock, Hellenism, 7.
nineteen
EPILOGUE
n the millennium leading up to the end of Late Antiquity, Jewish society and its institutions underwent a total transformation. What had crystallized by the seventh century c.e. was a far cry from what had been normative in the Hellenistic period. Earlier religious frameworks were radically altered or abandoned: holidays, such as those listed in Megillat Taanit, were dropped; others, such as Passover, Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur, were almost totally revamped; still others, such as Hanukkah, Purim, and Simat Torah, were added to the Jewish calendar. New political and religious frameworks (such as the synagogue) now replaced older ones (e.g., the Temple), and new leadership roles were created to accommodate the new circumstances, rabbis replacing priests and paytanim lling roles somewhat similar to those of the Temples Levites. Concepts such as the Oral Law and resurrection of the dead, which had been associated with one or more sects, had become mainstream. Jewish art developed in ways that would have been thought unimaginable in the later Second Temple period. A cluster of Jewish symbols evolved, while foreign motifsoften daring and revolutionarywere appropriated. The image of an eagle, regarded by many as anathema in Herods day, had become a widespread decoration in synagogues of Late Antiquity; and the corpus of sacred literature had been greatly expanded. Alongside the books of the Bible, rabbinic and other compilations now occupied an important place in Jewish consciousness. Demographically, the Jews were dispersed more than ever before, and while a large Jewish population remained
638
epilogue
in the Holy Land throughout this period, its prominence was increasingly challenged in the course of time, both de jure and de facto. There is no example more illustrative of these far-reaching changes than the ancient synagogue. First crystallized in the Second Temple period, it became the communal center of each Jewish settlement and the Jewish public building par excellence. However, while maintaining its status as a communal center, the synagogue began to acquire an enhanced measure of sanctity. Its liturgy expanded enormously, and its main hall assumed a marked degree of holiness. All this transpired in the course of Late Antiquity. Far from being an age of decadence and decline, as had formerly been assumed, Late Antiquity was indeed a period of dynamic growth and continued development within Jewish communities in general, and with regard to the synagogue in particular. Exuberant diversity, referred to at the outset of our study as characterizing the ancient synagogue, is evident throughout this period. It makes little dierence whether the discussion focuses on the nomenclature of the synagogue, ocials, architecture, art, inscriptions, or liturgy. In each and every one of these areas the ancient synagogue reects a kaleidoscope of styles, shapes, customs, and functions that is best accounted for by two complementary factors: the degree of inuence of the non-Jewish social and religious milieu on the synagogue and the fact that the institution was rst and foremost a local one. The tastes and proclivities of each and every community governed all aspects of the local synagoguephysical, functional, cultural, and religious. With the possible exception of the Patriarchate, and even then only at certain times and places, no one political or religious institution determined the manifold aspects of synagogue practice and policy. It has often been assumed that a larger body, such as the rabbinic class, gave direction and supervision to the various Jewish communities in both Palestine and the Diaspora. However, this was rarely the case in Late Antiquity. While rabbinic inuence may have made itself felt in certain liturgical areas and in certain places in both Palestine and Babyloniaand even then it was dependent upon the willingness of the sages to guide, and of the communities to be guidedrabbinic leadership does not appear to have been of decisive signicance for much of this period nor in most locales. As a communal institution, the synagogue was all inclusive. The entire range of communal needs was met within its framework, and, in turn, the synagogue mirrored the communitys wishes in its physical appearance, functions, and leadership. Yet the synagogues inclusiveness went deeper. Because of its centrality, it brought together and integrated into one framework a wide variety of forces and proclivities often seemingly contradictory. On some occasions, these elements simply coexisted; on others, they amalgamated more fully. Thus, for example, the tension between unity and diversity among Jewish communities gains fascinating expression in synagogue remains, not only among those edices in the same geographical area, but also among those throughout Palestine and the far-ung Diaspora. The various ways in which these two
epilogue
639
tendencies were incorporated is clearly demonstrated in the rich array of evidence associated with the institution. The integration of the particular and the universal is vividly attested in almost every aspect of the ancient synagogue. Uniquely Jewish elements coexisted alongside those drawn from the outside world. In this regard, the synagogue demonstrated a resiliency in what was incorporated as well as rejected. This balance between universalism and particularism is especially evident in Jewish art. It was in part borrowed and adapted and in part distinctly Jewish, both in its content and in its selection of forms to emulate. This inclusive role within the community was itself a unusual phenomenon in antiquity. Rarely do we hear of as broadly based an agenda for either a pagan or a Christian institution. However, the very essence and singularity of the synagogue was in its twin focus on the communal and religious dimensions. On the one hand, the former came to be dominated and shaped in the course of time by the latter; whereas the main hall of the building was once neutral in decoration and function, it eventually was regarded as a sacred area, with its art highlighting ritual objects and symbols. On the other hand, this religious emphasis was rooted in the community that created it, and the religious functions were anchored in the will, participation, and resources of the community at large. Herein lies a cardinal dierence between the church and the synagogue of Late Antiquity. The former aspired not only to be holy, but also to acquire a divine status. The Byzantine church was often considered a domus dei and not merely a domus ecclesiae. The description of the church building by the eighth-century bishop Germanus is striking testimony of this: The church is heaven on earth, where the God of heaven dwells and moves. It images forth the crucixion and burial and resurrection of Christ. It is gloried above the tabernacle of the testimony of Moses with its expiatory and holy of holies, pregured in the patriarch, founded on the apostles, adorned in hierarchs, perfected in the martyrs. 1 A century earlier, Maximus also wrote about the symbolism of the church building expressed through its liturgy and architecture. The building represented a two-tiered arrangement: the sanctuary () and the nave (), with priests and bishops occupying the former, the congregation the latter. This setting reects the entire universe: the angelic world and the human one, heaven and earth, body and soul.2 Hand in hand with this concept of the church as an otherworldly edice was the status of the bishop, who was considered the focus of the community, the representative of God, the mediator, high priest, and earthly father of his ock. No comparable descriptions are known to have existed regarding the synagogue. No
1. Quoted in Taft, Liturgy of the Great Church, 72. On the distinction between domus dei and domus ecclesiae, see Turner, From Temple to Meeting House, 1112, 30445. 2. Mathews, Early Churches, 121.
640 e p i l o g u e
hierarchy governed its proceedings and no set of divinely inspired individuals ociated. Whether during the Torah and haftarah readings, the targum, sermons, prayers, or piyyutim (with the sole exception of the priestly blessings), every Jew had the opportunity to actively participate in any aspect of the synagogue ritual. From its often modest size to its multifocal liturgy, the Byzantine synagogue, in contradistinction to its Christian counterpart, expressed a message of inclusion and involvement, where the congregation per se was of primary importance. In this sense, the Christian church approximates more closely the hierarchical stratication that once existed in the Jerusalem Temple. The Jews of Late Antiquity appear to have shied away from too close an analogy; the Temple was the house of God, whereas the synagogue was dened as a communal framework with a modicum of sanctity. In a larger context, the synagogues primary historical signicance was that it provided an essential unity to Jewish society of Late Antiquity.3 Despite its many geographical, linguistic, cultural, and religious variations, this communal institution and the ongoing expansion of its religious component provided a common framework for Jewish communities everywhere. The function fullled by the Jerusalem Temple in the pre-70 era was now achieved, mutatis mutandis, by this locally basedyet universally presentinstitution that Jews created wherever they lived, a diminished sanctuary that served their corporate and religious needs throughout Late Antiquity and beyond.
3. See comments in W. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism, 68.
GLOSSARY
Plural forms are shown in parentheses. aedicula small shrine composed of columns supporting a pediment aggadah non-halakhic rabbinic literature aliyah act of going up to read from the Torah or recite the Torah blessings Amidah lit., standing; central prayer in Jewish liturgy, recited thrice daily amora(im) sage who lived after the compilation of the Mishnah and who was active in the talmudic era (ca. 200500) amphora vase with a large oval body, a neck, and two handles reaching the top of the vessel apse a semicircular recess in a hall, found mainly in a basilica Aqedah story of the Binding of Isaac (Gen. 22) atrium courtyard before the entrance to a basilica av bet din head of a rabbinic court Avodah Temple cultic service baraita external tannaitic tradition not included in the Mishnah of R. Judah I basilica large Roman civic building Bavli Babylonian Talmud bet midrash house of study, usually a rabbinic academy bima (bimot) raised platform in a synagogue or a church birkat hamazon grace after meals boule city council of a polis
642 g l o s s a r y
bouleuterion cardo maximus Cathedra of Moses chancel screen chora collegia conch diakonos Diaspora ethrog(im) exedra Exilarch fresco gable gaon gerousia haftarah Hallel Haqhel Hekhalot Helios lintel lulav(im) maftir meturgeman(im) miqveh (miqvaot) Mussaf naos narthex nave ner tamid niche nymphaeum opus listatum opus reticulatum opus vittatum meeting place of a city council (boule) main north-south street in a Roman city seat of honor in a synagogue partition around the bima consisting of stone posts and panels; see also soreg Egyptian countryside outside of Alexandria religious or professional voluntary association shell pattern, often decorating the top of a niche synagogue ocial, similar to a church deacon Jewish settlement outside of Judaea or Palestine citron used on the Sukkot holiday semicircular or rectangular recess political and communal leader of Babylonian Jewry wall painting composed by the application of watercolors to wet plaster triangular end of a roof above a buildings facade head of a Babylonian academy in the early Middle Ages governing council of elders reading from the Prophets following the Torah-reading on Sabbaths and holidays Pss. 11318, recited on holidays ceremonial Torah-reading ceremony held every seven years on the Sukkot holiday (per Deut. 31:1013) mystical traditions rst composed in Palestine in Late Antiquity Greco-Roman sun god horizontal beam above a doorway or window palm branch used on the Sukkot holiday last person to be called to the Torah, one who recites the haftarah reading translator of the Torah reading into the vernacular (Aramaic or Greek) stepped cistern used as a ritual bath Additional Amidah recited on Sabbaths and holidays central chamber (cella) in a Greek temple, where the statue of a deity was placed entrance hall leading into the nave and aisles of a synagogue central hall of a basilica separated from the side aisles by a row of columns or pillars eternal light used in synagogues rectangular or curved recess in a wall public water facility, usually decorated with statues a facing composed of courses of small square stones alternating with one or more courses of bricks a facing composed of small square stones laid diagonally another term for opus listatum
glossary
parashah parnas(im) parokhet paytan(im) piyyut(im) polis politeuma pronaos propylaeum proseuche (proseuchae) Qaddish Qedushah qerovah Qiddush Rosh odesh sebomenoi shelia tzibbur Shema Shemoneh Esreh Shephelah shivata shofar (shofarot) siddur sidrah skoutlosis sofer(im) soreg stoa stylobate tabula ansata tanna(im) taqqanah (taqqanot) targum(im) temenos
643
weekly portion of the Torah-reading following the Babylonian cycle Jewish community leader a covering or a veil for a sacred space or for holy objects in the Tabernacle, the Temple, or the synagogue composer of synagogue liturgical poetry (piyyut) liturgical poetry composed for synagogue use Greek city autonomous political body in a polis granted by civil or Imperial authorities entrance room in front of the naos monumental entranceway house of prayer; synonym for synagogue, used almost exclusively in the Diaspora prayer of praise that punctuates the worship service central prayer built around verses from Isa. 6:3 and Ezek. 3:12; see also trisagion piyyut for the Amidah blessing over wine, recited on Sabbaths and holidays special day celebrating the appearance of the new moon lit., God-fearers, i.e., pagan sympathizers of Judaism prayer leader in a synagogue central prayer in Jewish liturgy (Deut. 6:49) another term for Amidah coastal area of Palestine, west of the Judaean hills piyyut for Sabbaths and festival evenings rams horn used on New Years Day (Rosh Hashanah) Jewish prayerbook weekly portion of the Torah-reading following the Palestinian cycle marble panels (revetments) decorating the walls of a hall teacher or scribe who often functioned as the translator of the Torah reading (meturgeman) chancel screen or partition used in the Jerusalem Temple and in Byzantine churches and synagogues public building with multiple colonnades open on one side (= Latin porticus) row of hewn stones used to support columns rectangular frame anked by ear-shaped triangles on its short sides, usually containing an inscription sage who lived up to the time of the compilation of the Mishnah (ca. 200 c.e.) rabbinic enactment translation and interpretation of the Torah into Aramaic or Greek sacred site of a temple
644 g l o s s a r y
triclinium trisagion Yerushalmi yotzer dining hall lit., thrice holy; verse from Isa. 6:3 constituting the core of a central prayer in Judaism and Christianity Jerusalem, or Palestinian, Talmud piyyut for the blessing preceding the Shema
ABBREVIATIONS
AJA AJP AJSL AJS Review ANRW ASR B b. BA BAR BASOR BCH BIOSCS BJPES BJRL BMC BSOAS CAD CBQ CD CIJ
American Journal of Archaeology American Journal of Philology American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures Association for Jewish Studies Review Aufstieg und Niedergang der rmischen Welt Ancient Synagogues Revealed (L. Levine, 1981) Bavli (Babylonian Talmud) ben, bar (son of ) Biblical Archaeologist Biblical Archaeology Review Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research Bulletin de Correspondance Hellnique Bulletin of the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies Bulletin of the Jewish Palestine Exploration Society Bulletin of the John Rylands Library British Museum Catalogue Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies Chicago Assyrian Dictionary Catholic Biblical Quarterly Codex Damascus (Damascus Document) Corpus Inscriptionum Judaicarum (Frey, 193652; reprint II, 1975)
646 a b b r e v i a t i o n s
CIRB CIS CJ CPJ DOP EI EJ FJB HSCP HTR HUCA ICC IDB IEJ INJ JA JAAR JBL JE JEA JGS JHS JIWE JJA JJS JPOS JQR JRA JRH JRS JSJ JSNT JSOT JSP JSQ JSS JTS LCL MAMA MGWJ NEAEHL NTS Or. Corpus Inscriptionum Regni Bosporani Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum Conservative Judaism Corpus Papyrorum Judaicarum (Tcherikover et al., 195764) Dumbarton Oaks Papers Eretz-Israel Encyclopaedia Judaica Frankfurter Judistische Beitrge Harvard Studies in Classical Philology Harvard Theological Review Hebrew Union College Annual International Critical Commentary The Interpreters Dictionary of the Bible Israel Exploration Journal Israel Numismatic Journal Jewish Art Journal of the American Academy of Religion Journal of Biblical Literature Jewish Encyclopedia Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Journal of Glass Studies Journal of Hellenic Studies Jewish Inscriptions of Western Europe (Noy, 199395) Journal of Jewish Art Journal of Jewish Studies Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society Jewish Quarterly Review Journal of Roman Archaeology Journal of Religious History Journal of Roman Studies Journal for the Study of Judaism Journal for the Study of the New Testament Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Journal for the Study of Pseudepigrapha Jewish Studies Quarterly Jewish Social Studies Journal of Theological Studies Loeb Classical Library Monumenta Asiae Minoris Antiqua Monatsschrift fr Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judentums New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land (E. Stern, 1993) New Testament Studies Orientalia (Rome)
647
BIBLIOGRAPHY
MODERN LITERATURE Aberbach, M., The Conicting Accounts of Josephus and Tacitus Concerning Cumanus and Felix Terms of Oce, JQR 40 (194950). , Jewish Education in the Mishnaic and Talmudic Period (Jerusalem: R. Mass, 1982). Hebrew. Abrahams, I., The Lost Confession of Samuel, HUCA 1 (1924). Aderet, A., From Destruction to Restoration: The Mode of Yavneh in the Re-Establishment of the Jewish People ( Jerusalem: Magnes, 1990). Hebrew. Adler, E. N., Une nouvelle chronique samaritaine, REJ 45 (1902). Ahlstrm, G. W., The History of Ancient Palestine from the Palaeolithic Period to Alexanders Conquest (Sheeld: JSOT, 1993) Albeck, Ch., Apocryphal Halakha in the Palestinian Targum and the Aggada, B. Lewin Jubilee Volume, ed. J. L. Fishman (Jerusalem: Mosad Harav Kook, 1939). Hebrew. , Midrash Wayyiqra Rabba, Louis Ginzberg Jubilee Volume (New York: American Academy of Jewish Research, 1945). Hebrew. , Six Orders of the Mishnah, 6 vols. (Jerusalem & Tel Aviv: Bialik & Dvir, 195258). Hebrew. , Introduction to the Mishnah (Jerusalem & Tel Aviv: Bialik & Dvir, 1959). Hebrew. Albright, W. F., A Biblical Fragment from the Maccabean Age: The Nash Papyrus, JBL 56 (1937). Alderink, L. J., and Martin, L. H., Prayer in Greco-Roman Religions, Prayer from Alexander to Constantine: A Critical Anthology (London & New York: Routledge, 1997). Alexander, P. S., The Targumim and Early Exegesis of Sons of God in Genesis 6, JJS 23 (1972).
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CRITICAL EDITIONS On occasion two dierent editions are used for the same source. Unless otherwise specied, pages indicated in the notes refer to the edition asterisked in the Bibliography. Abu lfath, in Samaritan Documents, ed. J. Bowman (Pittsburgh: Pickwick, 1977). Avot de R. Nathan, ed. S. Schechter (New York: Feldheim, 1945). Hebrew. Bet Hamidrash, ed. A. Jellinek, reproduction, 6 parts (Jerusalem: Wahrmann, 1967). Hebrew. Derech Eretz Zutta, ed. D. Sperber, 2d ed. (Jerusalem: Tzur-Ot, 1982). Hebrew. *Deuteronomy Rabbah (Midrash Debarim Rabbah), ed. S. Lieberman (Jerusalem: Wahrmann, 1964). Hebrew. , XI, ed. A. Mirkin, 2d ed. (Tel Aviv: Yavneh, 1975). Hebrew. Didascalia Apostolorum, ed. R. H. Connolly (Oxford: Clarendon, 1929). *Dierences in Customs between the People of the East and the People of Eretz-Israel, ed. M. Margalioth (Jerusalem: R. Mass, 1938). Hebrew. , ed. B. M. Lewin, reprint ( Jerusalem: Makor, 1973). Hebrew. Genesis Rabbah, ed. Y. Theodor and Ch. Albeck, 2 vols. (Jerusalem: Wahrmann, 1965). Hebrew. Genesis Rabbati, ed. Ch. Albeck ( Jerusalem: Meqitzei Nirdamim, 1967). Hebrew. arba dMoshe (The Sword of Moses), ed. Y. Harari (Jerusalem: Akademon, Hebrew University, 1997). Hebrew.
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Iggeret Harav Sherira Gaon, ed. B. M. Lewin (Haifa: n.p., 1921). Hebrew. Itinerary of Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela, trans. and ed. A. Asher, 2 vols. (London & Berlin: A. Asher, 184041). Josephus, LCL, 9 vols. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 195865). Kitab al-Tarikh, ed. P. Stenhouse (Sydney: Mandelbaum Trust, 1985). Lamentations Rabbah, ed. S. Buber (Vilna: Romm, 1899). Hebrew. Leviticus Rabbah, ed. M. Margulies, 5 vols. ( Jerusalem: Jewish Theological Seminary, 195360). Hebrew. Malalas, Chronicle (Melbourne: Australian Association for Byzantine Studies, 1986). *Mekhilta of R. Ishmael, ed. H. Horowitz and I. Rabin (Jerusalem: Bamberger and Wahrmann, 1960). Hebrew. , ed. J. Lauterbach, 3 vols. (Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1949). Mekhilta of R. Simeon b. Yoai, ed. J. N. Epstein and E. Z. Melamed ( Jerusalem: Meqitzei Nirdamim, 1956). Hebrew. Menorat Hamaor, by Israel b. Yosef Alnaqawa, ed. H. G. Enelow (New York: Bloch, 1929). Hebrew. Midrash Hagadol, Genesis, ed. M. Margaliot (Jerusalem: Mosad Rav Kook, 1967). Hebrew. Midrash Hagadol, Exodus, ed. M. Margaliot (Jerusalem: Mosad Rav Kook, 1957). Hebrew. Midrash Hagadol, Leviticus, ed. A. Steinsaltz (Jerusalem: Mosad Rav Kook, 1976). Hebrew. Midrash Hagadol, Numbers, ed. Z. M. Rabinowitz (Jerusalem: Mosad Rav Kook, 1967). Hebrew. Midrash Hagadol, Deuteronomy, ed. S. Fisch (Jerusalem: Mosad Rav Kook, 1973). Hebrew. Midrash Mishlei (The Midrash on Proverbs), ed. B. Visotzky (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992). Midrash on Psalms, ed. S. Buber (New York: Om, 1948). Hebrew. Midrash on Samuel, ed. S. Buber (Cracow: Fischer, 1893; reprint, Jerusalem: n.p., 1965). Hebrew. *Midrash on Song of Songs, ed. A. Greenhut and A. Wertheimer (Jerusalem: Ktav Yad Vasefer Institute, 1971). Hebrew. , ed. S. Dunesky (Jerusalem: Dvir, 1980). Hebrew. Midrash Tannaim, ed. D. Homan, 2 vols. (Berlin: Itzkowski, 1909). Hebrew. Philo, LCL, 11 vols. (Cambridge: Harvard University, 194962). *Pesiqta de Rav Kahana, ed. B. Mandelbaum, 2 vols. (New York: Jewish Theological Seminary, 1962). Hebrew. , ed. S. Buber, 2d ed. (New York: Om, 1949). Hebrew. Pesiqta Rabbati, ed. M. Friedmann (Tel Aviv: Esther, 1963). Hebrew. Pirqei Derekh Eretz, in Seder Eliyahu Zuta, ed. M. Friedmann (Vienna: Achiasaf, 1904; reprint, Jerusalem: Bamberger & Wahrmann, 1960). Hebrew. Pirkei Mashia, in Midreshei Geula, ed. Y. Even-Shmuel, 2d ed. (Jerusalem: Bialik, 1954). Hebrew. Samaritan Chronicle, ed. J. M. Cohen (Leiden: Brill, 1981). Scriptores Historiae Augustae, LCL, 3 vols. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 196768). Seder R. Amram Gaon, ed. D. Hedegrd (Lund: P. Lindstedt, 1951). English and Hebrew. Seder Eliyahu Rabbah, ed. M. Friedmann (Jerusalem: Bamberger & Wahrmann, 1960). Hebrew. Seder Eliyahu Zuta, ed. M. Friedmann ( Jerusalem: Bamberger & Wahrmann, 1960). Hebrew. Seder Olam Rabbah, ed. D. B. Ratner (New York: Orot, 1966). Hebrew. Siddur Abudraham, ed. Wertheimer (Tel Aviv: Zion, 1970). Hebrew.
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ILLUSTRATION CREDITS
Full references for the publications mentioned below appear in the Bibliography. Courtesy of Z. Radovan Figs. 1, 4, 5, 6, 8, 17, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 36, 40, 41, 47, 50, 56, 62, 65, 67, 68, 72, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 84, 85, 86, 87, 91, 92, 96, 99. Courtesy of the Israel Exploration Society Fig. 2. L. I. Levine, Roman Caesarea, 10. Fig. 11. L. I. Levine, ed., Ancient Synagogues Revealed, 179. Fig. 21. E. Stern, ed. NEAEHL, I, 233. Fig. 63. E. Stern, ed., NEAEHL, IV, 1419. Courtesy of D. Syon and the Israel Antiquities Authority Fig. 3. D. Syon and Z. Yavor, GamlaOld and New, Qadmoniot 121 (2001), p. 10. Courtesy of the Archives of the Institute of Archaeology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Figs. 7, 25, 26, 42, 44, 45, 46, 48, 49, 51, 53, 58, 59, 66, 69, 70, 71, 75, 83, 88, 89, 97. Courtesy of Y. Magen Figs. 9, 15.
732
Courtesy of A. Onn, S. Weksler-Bdolach, Y. Rapuano, T. Kanias, and the Israel Antiquities Authority Fig. 10. A. Onn, S. Weksler-Bdolach, Y. Rapuano, and T. Kanias, Khirbet Umm el-Umdan, Hadashot Archeologiyot 114 (2002): 75. Courtesy of L. M. White Fig. 12. L. M. White, Delos Synagogue Revisited, 157. Courtesy of the Biblical Archaeology Society Fig. 13. R. S. MacLennan, In Search of the Jewish Diaspora, 46. Photo by R. S. MacLennan. Fig. 39. H. Shanks, Judaism in Stone, 89. Fig. 98. H. Shanks, Judaism in Stone, 122. Courtesy of E. M. Meyers Fig. 16. E. M. Meyers et al., Excavations at Ancient Meiron, 13. Fig. 18. E. M. Meyers, C. L. Meyers, and J. F. Strange, Excavations at the Ancient Synagogue of Gush alav (Winona Lake: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1990), 66. Fig. 35. E. M. Meyers et al., Excavations at Khirbet Shema, 59. Fig. 95. E. M. Meyers et al., Excavations at Ancient Meiron, 12. Drawn by ani Davis Figs. 14, 37. Courtesy of Yale University Press Fig. 38. C. H. Kraeling, Dura: Synagogue, Plan VI. Courtesy of Aschendor Verlag Fig. 43. B. Brenk, Synagoge von Apamea, Seite 11. Courtesy of C. Danov Fig. 52. C. Danov, Neues aus der Geschichte von Philippopolis, Pl. 2, 2. Courtesy of R. Hachlili Fig. 54. R. Hachlili, Art and ArchaeologyDiaspora, 232. Courtesy of the Bible Lands Museum, Jerusalem Figs. 55, 61. Fig. 60. Drawn by J. Rosenberg. Courtesy of E. Lattanzi Fig. 57.
733
SOURCE INDEX
Leviticus
14:17 19:4 19:30 23 23:3944 24:3 26:1 26:2 26:31 68 479 39, 240 150, 538 216 356 238, 479, 482 39 200
Exodus
12:1 15 17:12 1920 20:2 20:4 20:20 21:1 2540 25:20 537 496 348, 377 538 551 479 479, 480 395 39 225
Numbers
3:38 11:16 15:3741 15:3841 21:9 199, 335 93 167, 550 551 225
736
19:1 29
source index
537 200 12:20 19:89 65 32
Deuteronomy
4:1519 4:16 4:17 4:18 4:19 56 5:6 5:8 6:4 6:45 6:49 6:7 6:9 11:1321 11:20 13:17 13:18 16 16:18 16:21 17:5 21:19 22:24 26:12 26:17 28:6 31 31:9 31:913 31:1013 31:26 32 481 479 479 479 479 552 551 480 553 551 167, 550, 643 38, 555 30 167 30 31 227 538 395 479 31 31 31 31 537 318, 372 43, 538 236 38, 151 538, 642 236 200, 550
I Kings
7:21 7:23. 8 8:2930 8:30 8:44 12:2633 22:10 341 225 24 326 196 198 225 30, 32
II Kings
2:12 4:23 6:21 7:1 7:34 10:1 18:4 21:47 23:8 429 24 429 30 30 93 225 25 31, 32
Isaiah
1:13 6:3 29:21 56:7 58:6 61:12 24 571, 572, 573, 643, 644 30, 31 240, 326 49 49
Jeremiah
1:1516 26:2 31:5 38:7 39:3 39:8 31 65 40 30, 32 31 24
Judges
9:2 93
I Samuel
3:3 6:12 356 353
Ezekiel
1:19 3:12 8:1 8:16 11:16 14:1 575 571, 573, 643 25 330 24, 96, 206, 357 25
II Samuel
6 203
source index
Amos
5:10 5:15 30, 31 31 7:10 8:13 573 573
737
Nehemiah
23 810 8:1 8:4 8:58 9 9:611 36 23 32 344, 376 530 543 552
Habbakuk
2:20 486, 489
Zechariah
8 8:16 25 31
Psalms
7:8 17:14 19 19:15 24:79 26:8 29 51:17 55:18 69:13 74:8 82:1 84:8 90:1 103:26 113118 113:2 115:1 125:5 138:2 85 85 552 565 32 478 546 565 546 31 25, 42 198, 486 477 24 543 554, 642 590 453 372 453
I Chronicles
1 16:31 17:79 24:118 26:5 372 24 38 39 356
II Chronicles
6:32 6:34 6:38 32:6 196 198 196, 198 30, 32
I Enoch
39:1213 572
Proverbs
1:21 8:34 31:23 31:31 199 336 30 30
Jubilees
6:2331 21:16 548 334
Judith
8:6 8:18 98 227
Ruth
3:11 4:12 30 31
Letter of Aristeas
1214 92 95 82 166 166
Daniel
2:20 6:11 590 164, 198, 326, 546
738
177 3046 305 3058 30821 310
source index
146 114, 302, 333 166 157 146 89, 159 CD 11, 2112, 1 CD 13, 1 CD 13, 23 1QS 2:1920 1QS 3:45 1QS 5:13 1QS 6:3 1QS 6:38 1QS 6:45 1QS 6:7 1QS 6:8 1QS 9:7 1QS 10:14 1QSa 2:1721 4Q tgLev 4Q tgJob 11Q tgJob 65 31 141 64 334 334 31 63 64, 141 31 64 64 31 141 160 160 160
I Maccabees
1, 2124 1, 4164 2, 42 3, 48 7, 12 10, 43 11, 4244 12, 9 14, 28 397 41 23, 42 147 23, 42 86 125 147 42
II Maccabees
2, 13 3, 1012 3, 31 4, 4. 5, 21 6 67 6, 187, 42 8, 23 14, 37 15, 9 154 410 85 125 397 41 296 126 147 429 154
III Maccabees
2, 28 7, 9 7, 13 7, 1920 128, 165 85 137 86, 141, 172
Testament of Levi
9:4 334
Antiquities
3, 91 4, 11516 4, 20911 4, 214 481 82 344 382
QUMRAN TEXTS
CD 10, 1013 CD 11, 21 334 167
source index
4, 287 8, 46 12, 10 12, 1133 12, 1078 12, 119 12, 11920 12, 388 13, 63 13, 6566 13, 67 13, 72 13, 7476 13, 7479 13, 377. 13, 387. 14, 110 14, 11213 14, 115 14, 21112 14, 21316 14, 21364 14, 214 14, 21416 14, 215 14, 23132 14, 235 14, 25759 14, 258 14, 25961 14, 260 14, 26061 14, 261 14, 374 14, 430 15, 12122 15, 380425 15, 396 15, 41116 15, 417 15, 41819 15, 419 16, 14 16, 4243 16, 43 16, 44 16, 16061 382 408 141 82 157, 159 125 114 96 96 91 83, 85, 96 96 85 111 125 125 117 88 82 113 90, 112, 115 113 318 88, 141 106, 144 111, 11213 82, 114, 140, 143, 395 334 114, 302 140, 143 82, 88, 115, 395 141 88, 130 46 499 72 45 95 95 341 504 505 46 156 148 133 102, 114 16, 16072 16, 16073 16, 164 16, 16970 16, 171 17, 14963 18, 5559 18, 122 18, 149 18, 262. 19, 27991 19, 290 19, 29296 19, 299305 19, 300 19, 300311 19, 305 19, 30911 20, 11317 20, 11517 20, 17378 20, 18284 20, 236
739
88 113 115, 117, 128, 141, 318, 397, 405 102 140 224 224 46 53 224 66 133 67 136 68 67 67 67 147 66 68 68 96
Life
6 11 14 27 3539 56 64 6566 69 79 91 92 134 13435 271 27198 27680 276303 277 278 279 280 88 93 93 127 384 93 427 226 53 93 53 93 53, 427 148, 203 53, 427 139 93 102 52 53 52, 90 52
740
source index
495 165 52 53 427 53 427 53, 93, 100, 139 427 2, 641 4, 336 4, 4069 4, 408 4, 582 5, 14255 5, 181 5, 184237 5, 190 5, 19899 5, 2016 5, 205 5, 21314 5, 562 6, 42327 7, 44 7, 4445 7, 45 7, 47 7, 14852 7, 368 7, 427 53, 427 93 78 46 441 36 226 45, 61 95 503, 505 452 56 601 46 61 136 125, 128 117, 126, 165 53, 100 148 127 96
War
1, 33 1, 12932 1, 153 1, 277 1, 328 1, 425 2, 123 2, 124 2, 12829 2, 12833 2, 129 2, 12931 2, 146 2, 175 2, 19598 2, 22831 2, 231 2, 25961 2, 26670 2, 28492 2, 28588 2, 28592 2, 292 2, 463 2, 482 2, 488 2, 49091 2, 495 2, 55961 2, 560 2, 56061 2, 570 2, 571 2, 599 2, 615 96 302 437 46 124 124 475 152 63 141 334 65 31 397 227 147 66 127 68 68 68 136 147 117 93 285 100 107 295 117, 126, 501 132 93 382 53, 427 53
On Dreams
2, 127 89, 91, 148
Embassy
132 132. 13234 13237 133 134 107, 285 90 136 67 90, 136, 170 90
source index
13435 13449 137 138 13839 155 15557 156 15657 157 214 216 245 281 28182 291 297 311 311. 312 31216 315 319 91 85 91 91 90 56, 285 106 89, 148 88, 90 46 82 88, 90 82, 113 113 82 88 46 91 90 89 88, 90, 106 115 46
741
Moses
2, 4142 2, 215 2, 21516 2, 232 159 630 89, 155 82
Special Laws
1, 77 2, 62 2, 6264 2, 63 2, 18892 3, 16974 3, 171 88 89, 128 156 89 548 499 91
Flaccus
41. 43 4496 4546 48 55 74 12223 90 91 67 82 91 107, 285 93 114, 334
Mark
16 1:2128 1:2129 1:39 3:1 3:15 49 46 51 46 46 51
Hypothetica
7, 12 7, 13 11, 1 11, 5 149 28, 89, 137, 156, 630 152 141
742
3:16 5:22 5:35 5:36 5:38 6:16 6:2 7:34 13:9 15:21
source index
51 418, 428 418 418 418, 428 48, 49 46 302 143 56
John
4:1926 6:3559 9:22 12:42 16:2 18:20 242 46, 51 209 209 209 46
Acts
2:511 2:911 2:10 3:1 6:17 6:89 6:9 9:12 9:2 9:20 9:2022 9:2023 11:20 13:5 13:14 13:1415 13:1441 13:15 13:1516 13:27 13:42 13:43 13:4448 13:46 13:50 14:1 14:12 14:16 14:2 14:1416 14:19 15:21 16. 16:1213 16:13 17:1 17:14 57 82 56 168, 546 55 55 55, 207 126 116, 117 116, 117 116 126 56 116, 117 1, 116 149, 153, 581 582 117, 118, 137, 157, 418, 630 50 153 116 1, 117 116 116 132 116 117 116 418, 428 158 116 116, 149 116 117, 501 114, 116, 132, 302, 316, 334 116 501
Luke
1:14 2:14 4 4:1544 4:1621 4:1622 4:1630 4:1719 4:1721 4:1819 4:20 4:2021 4:2022 4:22 4:28 4:3138 4:44 6:611 7:15 7:5 7:22 8:41 8:49 11:24 12:11 13:10. 13:1013 13:1017 13:1021 13:14 17:724 21:12 23:26 48 573 48 46 118 149 49, 50, 582 153 153 154 158, 438 157, 630 348 50 50 51 79 51 51 110, 388 49, 51 418, 428 418, 428 590 143 408 501 418 46 47, 137 50 143 56
source index
17:19 17:2 17:4 17:10 17:1012 17:11 17:12 17:16. 17:17 17:24 18:4 18:6 18:7 18:8 18:1217 18:17 18:1821 18:19. 18:2426 18:26 19:9 19:29 21:27 22:19 22:24 22:26 23:16 24:12 26:11 28:17 28:21 116 116 117 116 501 117 117 116 116 242 116, 117 134 116 117, 418 418 418 116 116 118 116 134 53, 100 56 55, 143, 395 79 79 56 55 55 286 286
743
II Timothy
3:67 499
Revelation
4:811 573
Peah
8, 7 8, 78 396, 397 396
Terumot
11, 10 359
Bikkurim
1, 5 3, 2 505 40, 438
Romans
15:2526 115
Shabbat
1, 2 1, 3 550 442
I Corinthians
1:1 3:17 11:1734 14:34 16:14 36:5 418 242 142 499 115 582
Eruvin
3, 5 3, 79 10, 10 581 555 459
II Corinthians
6:16 11:24 242 143
Pesaim
4, 4 4, 8 241, 359 483
744 s o u r c e i n d e x
Sheqalim
34 397
Yoma
1, 3 3, 3 3, 10 7, 1 150 334 56 43, 137, 344, 420, 438, 540
Sukkah
3, 12 3, 13 4, 4 5, 4 5, 5 199, 554 486 438 330 441
Betzah
3, 8 429
3, 2 3, 3 3, 4 3, 45 3, 46 3, 5 3, 6 3, 21 4, 2 4, 24 4, 3 4, 4 4, 5 4, 6 4, 8 4, 89 4, 9
201 185, 200, 407, 486 151, 537 150 492 555 150, 539 352 168 154 31, 202, 527, 555 540, 578 526, 556 506 209, 475, 526 209, 558 475
Ketubot
7, 6 13, 11 499 195
Rosh Hashanah
1, 3 2, 8 4, 1 4, 14 4, 3 4, 7 4, 9 174 229, 478 554 199 554 554 545
Nedarim
5, 5 42, 381, 448, 455, 456
Sotah
1, 5 7, 1 7, 12 7, 6 7, 7 7, 78 7, 8 9, 15 39 473, 627 558 168 438 137, 420 43, 344, 376, 438, 538 436, 443
Taanit
1, 4 2 2, 1 2, 12 2, 2 2, 24 2, 34 2, 5 3, 6 4, 1 4, 2 4, 3 4, 4 495 40 201, 351, 352 558 289 40 548 40, 205, 441, 558 495 526 39 540 554
Gittin
5, 8 526
Qiddushin
4, 13 444
Sanhedrin
1, 6 93
Megillah
1, 3 3, 1 446 201, 351, 356, 368, 382, 405
Makkot
3, 12 143, 395, 442
source index
Shevuot
4, 10 409 2, 2 2, 3 2, 5 2, 56 408 341 504 429
745
Avodah Zarah
3, 1 3, 3 3, 4 470, 474, 605 482 229, 478
Qinim
1, 4 505
Avot
1, 2 2, 8 2, 10 2, 13 (or 18) 3, 10 5, 21 530 429 444 545 208, 476, 558 401
Kelim
1, 69 195
Negaim
13, 12 341
Parah
3, 5 76
Menaot
10, 8 13, 11 483 545
Miqvaot
2, 10 5, 4 6, 10 8, 1 429 114, 334 334 335
ullin
1, 7 442
Bekhorot
5, 5 382
Zavim
3, 2 142, 382
Arakhin
3, 2 7, 2 455 455
Yadaim
4, 5 474
Tosefta Berakhot
1, 2 1, 4 1, 5 1, 9 2, 1 2, 9 3, 56 3, 6 3, 13 3, 1516 3, 19 3, 25 6, 18 6, 20 565 591 553 575 553 209 556 547 543, 549 196, 327 550 546, 549 533 558
Kritot
1, 7 505
Tamid
1, 2 2, 1 4, 35, 1 5, 1 5, 3 5, 6 7, 2 7, 3 7, 4 526 526 169 61, 168, 526, 542, 550 43, 438 39 168, 527 95 200
Middot
14 61
746
source index
Betzah
396 396, 397 2, 15 303
Peah
4, 821 4, 9
Rosh Hashanah
2, 11 2, 17 2, 18 555 167, 543, 549 545
Terumot
1, 10 2, 13 144, 396 421, 458
Demai
3, 1617 396
Taanit
1, 813 1, 913 1, 13 1, 14 3, 1 3, 6 40 548 40, 439, 495, 519, 558 205 568 174
Maaser Sheni
5, 16 391
Bikkurim
2, 8 40, 438
Megillah
2, 5 2, 12 2, 1316 2, 14 2, 17 2, 18 3 3, 17 3, 19 3, 56 3, 6 3, 10 3, 11 3, 1112 3, 13 3, 15 3, 18 3, 1820 3, 19 3, 21 207, 305 382 388 198, 359 56, 60, 207, 382, 388 194, 393, 407, 486 48, 137 538 153, 492 538 555 539 501, 539 506 208, 626 140 154 578 153 43, 75, 93, 197, 203, 237, 339, 350, 352, 375, 421, 433, 439, 473, 527, 567 335, 389, 472 199, 324 315 161 458 578
Shabbat
13, 2 16, 22 160, 474 59, 144, 396
Eruvin
4, 7 315, 406
Pesaim
3, 19 4, 15 10, 68 10, 8 483 61 554 486
Kippurim
1, 9 2, 4 2, 5 3, 18 169 56 56 540
Sukkah
2, 10 3, 2 4, 1 4, 5 4, 6 477 554 504 60, 140, 168 43, 53, 91, 96, 149, 168, 264, 339, 343, 347, 376, 433, 438, 450 442
4, 1112
3, 22 3, 2223 3, 23 3, 3141 3, 35 3, 41
source index
Moed Qatan
2, 15 229
747
Oholot
4, 2 391
agigah
2, 1 2, 9 348 60
Miqvaot
4, 5 5, 78 6, 1 6, 3 6, 34 114, 334 334 335 114, 334 334
Sotah
6, 23 6, 3 7, 7 7, 1516 13, 8 554 554 627 441 519
Tohorot
8, 10 381
Makhshirin
2, 12 114, 334
Qiddushin
5, 10 444
Yerushalmi Berakhot
1, 1, 2a 1, 1, 2c 1, 2, 3a 1, 5, 3c 1, 5, 3d 1, 6, 3d 2, 1, 4a 2, 3, 4bc 2, 4, 4d 2, 8, 5d 3, 6a 3, 1, 6a 4, 1, 7ab 4, 1, 7b 4, 1, 7c 4, 1, 7cd 4, 1, 7d 4, 3, 8a 4, 4, 8a 4, 4, 8b 4, 5, 8bc 4, 6, 8c 4, 7, 8c 5, 1, 8d 5, 1, 8d9a 5, 9a 5, 1, 9a 5, 2, 9b 555 527 391 476, 531, 553 494, 556, 566 553, 566, 569 591 565 627 393 207, 407 393, 407, 421, 478 566 200, 240, 546 369, 443 546 337, 341, 441, 521 546, 563 570 204, 377 196 200, 545, 564 570 467, 477 198, 200, 246 404 207, 246, 404, 486 340
Bava Metzia
11, 23 42, 384, 448
Bava Batra
8, 14 144
Sanhedrin
7, 1 9, 1 60 442
Makkot
5, 2 442
Avodah Zarah
2, 7 5, 1 5, 2 6, 3 392 470 226, 478 338, 350
Menaot
13, 21 519
Bekhorot
3, 25 382
Arakhin
2, 1 505
KelimBava Batra
1, 11 337
748
source index
436 440, 471, 494, 575 527 495 24 544 440, 457, 493 246, 340 590 6, 8a 16, 1, 15c 16, 5, 15c 17, 1, 16a 20, 17c 20, 1, 17c 207 160, 493, 536, 583 152 441, 442 369 317, 393, 411
Eruvin
3, 8, 21c 3, 9, 21c 6, 3, 23c 555 567 457
Peah
1, 1, 15d 7, 4, 20b 8, 7, 21a 8, 21b 8, 9, 21b 410 337 396, 399, 444, 458 207 187, 207, 384
Pesaim
1, 1, 27b 4, 9, 31b 7, 1, 34a 8, 8, 36b 318, 393 241 303 408
Demai
3, 1, 23b 4, 2, 23d 5, 2, 24c 396 567 303
Yoma
1, 1, 38d 7, 1, 44b 7, 5, 44b 441 436, 494 207
Kilaim
9, 4, 32b 9, 32c 9, 4, 32c 207, 404, 407 207 303, 336
Sheqalim
2, 7, 47a 3, 4, 47c 5, 6, 49b 7, 3, 50c 184 550 187, 207, 337, 384 207
Sheviit
1, 7, 33b 6, 1, 36d 8, 11, 38bc 9, 1, 38d 9, 5, 39a 482 383, 436, 458, 490 229, 481 446 207
Sukkah
1, 11, 52c 4, 1, 54b 5, 1, 55a 5, 1, 55ab 5, 1, 55b 5, 2, 55b 5, 5, 55b 337 482 95, 582 91, 582 184 60, 504 504
Maaser Sheni
5, 2, 56a 384, 445
Bikkurim
1, 3, 64a 1, 4, 64a 3, 3, 65c 3, 3, 65d 143 395 351, 457 207, 238, 369, 391, 458, 459, 486
Rosh Hashanah
1, 3, 57a 4, 4, 59c 4, 6, 59c 564 493 549, 555
Betzah
2, 2, 61b 5, 2, 63a 174 371
Shabbat
4, 2, 7a 317
source index
Taanit
1, 2, 64a 1, 3, 64b 1, 4, 64b 2, 1, 65a 2, 2, 65b 2, 2, 65c 3, 4, 66cd 3, 8, 66d 3, 11, 66d 4, 1, 67b 4, 1, 67c 4, 1, 67d 4, 5, 68b 4, 8, 69a 207, 476, 489 590 495 201, 351 289 546, 563 495 203 95 568 369 337, 341, 441, 546 493 206 2, 1, 77b 2, 3, 78a 3, 6, 79d 411, 487 411 386, 576
749
Moed Qatan
2, 3, 81b 3, 1, 81d 393 403, 444
Yevamot
1, 6, 3a 12, 13a 12, 6, 13a 12, 7, 13a 399 42 383, 436, 458 490
Sotah
1, 2, 16c 1, 4, 16d 5, 6, 20c 7, 1, 21b 7, 6, 22a 502 207, 487, 501, 582 402, 554 208, 473, 563, 627 436, 494
Megillah
1, 1, 70a 1, 6, 70b 3, 1, 73d 207 446 60, 61, 144, 188, 201, 202, 207, 323, 368, 388, 398, 405, 477, 490 144 490 42, 136, 198, 207, 339, 359, 382, 396, 397, 398, 480, 490 207, 217, 330, 332, 403, 406, 444, 445, 476, 486, 490, 491 492 445, 490 550 445, 553 24 207 207, 439, 445, 474, 492, 578 24, 26, 150, 538, 577 154, 553, 577 578 556 207, 383, 436, 445, 474, 493, 494
Ketubot
8, 32c 8, 11, 32c 12, 3, 35a 12, 3, 35b 13, 35c 13, 1, 35c 144 398 207, 404, 407 336 144 61, 398
3, 74a 3, 1, 74a 3, 2, 74a 3, 4, 74a 3, 58, 74ac 3, 6, 74b 3, 7, 74b 3, 8, 74b 3, 8, 74c 4, 1, 74c 4, 1, 74d 4, 1, 75a 4, 2, 75a 4, 3, 75a 4, 4, 75a 4, 5, 75b
Nedarim
4, 3, 38c 5, 6, 39b 6, 40a 6, 13, 40a 444 456 392 287
Nazir
7, 1, 56a 7, 2, 56a 207, 393, 478 407, 489
Qiddushin
1, 8, 61c 3, 14, 64c 4, 12, 66b 410 398, 457 390
agigah
1, 7, 76c 1, 8, 76d 2, 1, 77a 400, 443, 457, 458, 490 458 348
Bava Metzia
2, 9, 8d 407, 410, 441
750
source index
15a 16a 16b 16b17a 17a 19a 21b 24b 26a 26b 27b 27b28a 27b28b 28a 28b 28b29a 29a 29b 30a 30b 31a 32b 33a 35b 40b 47a 53a 54a 55b 56a 60b 63ab 302, 547, 566 209, 565 564 556 289, 401 303 557, 575 565 200 24, 200, 240, 544, 546, 566 340, 521 546 162 337 540, 544, 547 209 563 421 196 340, 478 564 204 24, 544 442 564, 565 208 289 348 527 436 556, 557 287, 392, 457
Bava Batra
1, 6, 12d 396
Sanhedrin
1, 1, 18a 1, 2, 19a 1, 4, 19c 2, 1, 19d20a 2, 6, 20cd 2, 6, 20d 8, 2, 26ab 10, 1, 28a 10, 2, 28c 10, 29a 12, 4, 23a 13, 9, 23d 207, 395, 489 392 60 392 391, 582 459 318, 393 207 369 400 442 436
Avodah Zarah
1, 2, 39c 3, 1, 42c 3, 3, 42d 4, 43d 4, 1, 43d 564 470, 601 362, 483, 621 205 482
Horayot
3, 2, 47a 3, 7, 48b 392 489
Bavli Berakhot
3a 4b 6a 6b 6b8a 7b8a 8a 9b 11b12a 12a 12b 13a 13b 14ab 14b 557 565 198, 200, 246, 486 290, 446 477 290, 477, 566 106, 336, 340, 477, 478 565 563 168, 531, 553 564 444 565, 567 565 551
Shabbat
11a 12b 13a 22b 24a 29a 29b 30ab 31a 32a 35b 315 565 444 357 582 337 207, 337, 421, 476 583 400 195, 198, 208, 351, 381, 476, 558 442
source index
56a 62a 72b 104a 115a 119a 125b 139a 150a 384, 395, 436 510 326, 615 411 160, 474 290 352 207 140, 391, 392, 396, 407, 411 69b 71b 87b 227 519 564
751
Sukkah
29a 41b 45a 49b 51a 51b 51b52a 53a 55a 444 477 95 536 527 91, 95, 345, 439 504 60 290
Eruvin
55b 74b 86b 96a 289, 315, 318, 406, 436 289, 406, 436 352 483
Betzah
15b 16a 39b 90 442 381, 455
Pesaim
8b 49a 49b 53ab 53b 64b 100b101a 101a 102b 104a 117b 402 521 208, 421, 443, 456 303 241 61 144, 393, 406 289 564 480 290
Taanit
4b 4b5a 8b 10a 13a 14b 16a 16b 19b 22b 24a 24ab 24a25b 25b 26a 26b 27b 28b 29a 29b 565 564 495 495, 564 174 565 289 439 565 565 392 495 495 495 495 568 39 290, 565 527 565
Rosh Hashanah
24ab 24b 27a 29b 31a 31b 34b 470, 478, 483, 484 89, 290, 364, 565 439, 564 199, 519 200, 550 290, 526, 527, 554 565
Yoma
8b 10a 11a 19b 35b 36b 56b 420 289 289 169 384 239 239
Megillah
3a 3b 17b 26 160 540, 544
752
source index
24, 162 290, 446, 565, 578 577 205, 482, 565 290, 476 154, 507, 577 527, 565, 578 578 565 458 56, 60, 207, 288, 382, 388 382 188, 287, 290, 291, 343, 350, 369, 407, 491 477 382, 477 393, 486 194, 407 4, 24, 25, 96, 206, 246, 291, 476, 478, 632 492 151, 154, 536, 567 564 537 555, 567, 577 537, 539 150, 368, 370, 539 8b 25b 34a 85a 103b104a 105a 408, 421 526 404 290 404 61, 144
17b18a 21b 21b22a 22a 22b 23a 23b 24a 24b 25b 26a 26ab 26b 26b27a 27a 28ab 28b 29a 29a32a 29b 29b30a 30b 31a 31b 32a
Nedarim
37a 37b 48a 444 160 456
Nazir
53a 207
Sotah
21a 22a 30b 33a 38a 38b 39a 39ab 39b 40a 49a 49ab 289, 458 206, 501 554 565 502 341, 375 526 526, 527 203, 353, 527 489, 526, 563, 566 572, 590 436
Moed Qatan
22b 22b23a 338, 473, 476 458
Gittin
36a 58a 59b60a 60a 403, 444 206, 398 492, 526 421
agigah
14b 15ab 16a 348 206, 400 527
Qiddushin
26a 30a 49a 73b 76b 402 401 401, 578 314 291
Yevamot
64b 65b 95a 96b 98a 207, 489 207, 411, 489 290 184 348, 350
Bava Qama
60b 82a 99b 113a 409 26, 150, 538 489 290
Ketubot
5a 140, 391, 392, 396, 407, 411, 476
source index
114b 117a 303, 402 456
753
Horayot
10a 13b14a 458 457
Bava Metzia
28b 84b 410 443
Zevaim
118b 207
Bava Batra
3b 4a 7b 8a11a 8b 21a 25ab 167a 287 95 192 396 338, 443, 444 144, 398, 444 330 290
Menaot
28b 43a 43b 98b 204, 470 512 533 484
ullin
91b 95b 97a 574 563 207, 489
Sanhedrin
7b 14a 17b 21b 30b 32b 61b 64a 104b 290 458 390, 436, 442, 443, 486 160 458 303 326 227 443
Bekhorot
29a 36b 444 382
Arakhin
2b3a 6b 512 198, 289, 359, 388
Dierences in Customs
1 14 22 29 32 36 41 42 43 47 48 49 54 55 553, 567, 591 569 568 528, 568 568 197, 237, 247, 339, 527, 567 567 568 568 568, 577 151, 536, 567 353, 568, 577 442 568
Makkot
16b 23a 290, 444 442
Shevuot
13b 455
Avodah Zarah
3b 6b 7b8a 8a 24b 38ab 43a 43ab 43b 50a 58b59a 443 479 546 564 353 501 204, 470 483 290, 364, 565 480 229, 481
Tractate Soferim
5, 17 10, 6 11, 3 11, 46 160 380, 440, 555, 590, 591 436, 445, 494 589
754
source index
550 567, 591 154, 441, 578 353, 590 556 590 377, 440 152, 536 538 538 555 538 589 200, 239, 591 591 502 400 590 591 407, 408, 440 440 591 590, 591 591 5, 15 7, 2 7, 8 487, 501 246, 336 581
12, 7 13, 9 13, 15 14, 49 14, 410 14, 6 14, 9 16, 8 17, 1 17, 2 17, 5 17, 6 18, 1 18, 2 18, 3 18, 5 18, 7 18, 10 19, 5 19, 9 20, 5 20, 59 21, 5 47
Ecclesiastes Rabbah
5, 7 7, 11 8, 10 9, 15, 7 9, 17 10, 8 336 207 238 590 581 445
Esther Rabbah
Proem 3 1, 3 152 536
Exodus Rabbah
22, 3 40, 1 41, 2 43, 4 47, 5 553 581 398, 411 348 402
Tractate Semaot
12, 5 14, 14 140 421
Genesis Rabbah
28, 3 30, 8 31, 19 33, 3 36, 1 49, 23 52, 4 54, 4 65, 15 65, 22 68, 9 69, 4 79, 20 80, 1 81, 1 581 581 495 207, 392, 404, 486, 495 369 204, 377 400 353 209, 393 400 546 546 436 391, 459, 476, 582 42, 458, 581
Avot de R. Nathan, B
12 401
Deuteronomy Rabbah
1, 16 4, 8 471 398, 411
source index
81, 2 92, 6 97. 98, 13 383, 436 336 152 582
755
Mekhilta of R. Ishmael
Bo (Pisa), 1 114, 302, 316 Beshala, 1 24, 377, 440, 545 Yitro (Baodesh), 6 479, 551 Yitro (Baodesh), 11 198, 488
Genesis Rabbati
45, 8 84, 285, 297
Lamentations Rabbah
Proem 2 Proem 12 Proem 17 1, 1 1, 17 1, 45 1, 49 2, 4 2, 47 3 3, 17 400, 443, 457 61 393, 582 348 384 504 61 61 581 445 421
Midrash Hagadol
genesis
19:27 23:1 24:60 25:8 25:24 27:22 28:11 28:13 24 401 440 404 208 400 24 546
Leviticus Rabbah
3, 6 4, 3 5, 1 5, 4 5, 5 6, 3 7, 3 7, 11 9, 9 11, 7 16, 5 22, 4 23, 4 26, 3 27, 2 29, 1 30, 1 30, 2 32, 7 34, 14 35, 12 37, 2 152, 581 398, 411 369 292 407 409 401 487 501 404 442 207, 336 377, 436, 546 207 444 564 444, 487 443 398 495 207, 489 398
exodus
15:1 18:21 20:7 20:20 20:29 21:1 27:21 34:8 34:14 35:1 40:32 445 446 409 486 480 384, 395, 436, 442 359 411 480 150, 344, 581 540, 546
leviticus
6:2 22:13 357, 359 521
numbers
5:31 8:1 501 241
deuteronomy
5:8 16:18 480 395, 442
756
source index
Pesiqta de Rav Kahana
1, 7 3 3, 1 5, 8 6, 3 9, 5 9, 9 11, 13 11, 16 11, 23 12, 3 12, 25 15, 5 15, 7 18, 5 23, 1 24, 7 24, 19 25 25, 1 27, 1 27, 2 28 28, 1 28, 8 347 440 377 198, 246, 477 401 591 444 359 401, 445 443 182, 562, 581 581 400, 443, 457 61 207, 348, 486, 488 564 535 200 207 400 442, 444, 487 399, 401, 443 487 393 246
Midrash on Proverbs
10 14 31 590 254, 557 582
Midrash on Psalms
1, 15 14, 6 17, 4 17, 5 19, 2 19, 22 84, 4 91 91, 3 93 93, 8 127 127, 1 498 402 24 378 377, 440 24, 546 246, 477 403 474, 490 53 53, 400 400, 443 457
Midrash on Samuel
6 7, 5 7, 6 7, 10 207 392 486 391
Numbers Rabbah
9, 20 11, 4 12, 3 12, 4 501 375 207, 474 341
Pesiqta Rabbati
22 26 33 40 41 43 Supplement B 409 24 327 556 402 402 207, 489
source index
Seder Olam
15 198
757
Tanuma
Noah, 20 Lech Lecha, 10 Vayishla, 9 Vayishla, 21 Beshala, 27 Terumah, 1 Ki Tissa, 15 Tzav, 7 Tzav, 13 Tzav, 14 Qedoshim, 10 Emor, 10 Buqotai, 4 Kora, 12 Matot, 2 Massaei, 1 Ki Tavo, 1 Haazinu, 4 527 348, 441 530 327 377 581 398 458 575 401 196 444 315, 404 200 441, 442 458 200, 204 564
SifreDeuteronomy
16 29 29, 26 41 48 127 161 306 343 352 356 458 327 196 200, 530, 546 444 150 401 488, 556 24, 544, 581 521 405
Yalqut Shimoni
genesis
87 102 110 133 145 152 158 400 582 404, 411 436 384 404 401
SifreNumbers
1 39 75 115 356 439, 526 441 512, 551
exodus
286 376 379 407 443 401 400 403
Sifre Zuta
6, 27 168
leviticus
471 479 481 643 441 401 405 555
numbers
752 553
758
source index
I Chronicles
16:31 24
deuteronomy
871 501
i samuel
77 402
Isaiah
1:13 24
isaiah
390 61
psalms
703 881
proverbs
943 964 501 582
lamentations
1022 402
Florida
20 421
Aristides Oracles
8, 54 405
Exodus
18:12 26:9 24 160
Codex Theodosianus
7, 8, 2 16, 8, 2 16, 8, 4 16, 8, 8 16, 8, 9 16, 8, 12 16, 8, 13 16, 8, 14 16, 8, 15 16, 8, 20 16, 8, 21 16, 8, 25 238, 302 423, 433, 469 423, 430, 469 423, 469 211 211 423, 433, 469 423, 434, 469 469 211 211 211
Leviticus
22:28 26:1 26:2 471 238, 478, 493, 580 472
Numbers
6:23 24:24 526 160
Deuteronomy
33:11 161
Judges
5:9 5:24 24 518
source index
Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historia
40, 3, 8 81
759
Juvenal Satires
III, 1018 III, 296 285 106
Saturninus
8, 13 422
Martial Epigrammata
IV, 4 132
Seneca Epistles
41, 1 333
Suetonius Augustus
31 44 405 95
Plato Timaeus
23a 405
Iulius
42, 3 107
Tiberius
32, 2 149
Tacitus Annals
2, 85 56
Sulla
32 333
History
5, 5, 4 128, 480
Procopius Buildings
1 6, 2 244 302
760 s o u r c e i n d e x
Panarion
16, 2, 15 19, 3, 5 29, 9, 2 30, 11 30, 11, 1 30, 11, 14 30, 11, 2 30, 11, 4 30, 12 30, 18, 2 80, 1, 5 80, 1, 6 601 326 209 143, 395 419 461 240 383, 469 184 419, 426 325 100
Augustine Catecheses
1, 23 296
City of God
2, 7 405
Confessions
8, 12 400
I Clement
59, 34 561
Praeparatio Evangelica
513C 401
Vita Constantini
3, 33 3, 36 3, 45 244 244 244
Didache
910 560, 561
Didascalia Apostolorum
3, 8 3, 9 3, 12 9, 25 12 510 510 510 561 350, 516
Comm. on Galatians
1, 1 469
source index
Contra Vigilantius
13 469
761
Julian Epistle
22, 430D 396
In Ezekiel
33, 33 34, 3 489 582
In Zachariah
II, 6, 9 469
Letters
33, 4 36, 1 112 121, 10, 1920 499 292, 405 469 469
Malalas Chronicle
8, 2067 10 10, 261 126 126 68, 126
Martyrdom of Pionius
13 293
Homilies on Leviticus
5, 8 293
Selections of Exodus
12, 46 293
762
source index
MEDIEVAL JEW ISH LITERATURE Maimonides Laws of agigah
3, 2 505
Laws of Prayer
1, 2 1, 4 11, 3 11, 4 13, 1 549 549 343, 345, 352 339, 377 152
Tertullian Ad Nationes
13 334
On Fasting
16 558
SUBJECT INDEX
Aaron: biblical motif, 231, 362, 377, 608; inscription, 372 R. Abba bar Aa, 569 Abba Benjamin, 486 R. Abbahu, 330, 368, 369, 395, 396, 403, 407, 482, 489, 490, 549, 570 Abbaye, 291, 477, 478 ablutions. See washing before prayer Abraham (biblical gure): 404, 497, 539, citygate, 30, 31; mosaic motif, 231, 608, 610; Mt. Moriah (Aqedah), 205 Absalom, 31 Abudraham, 154 Abu l-fath, 188, 189, 190, 524 R. Abun, 337, 362, 471, 483, 494, 575, 621 Abusin el-Meleq, papyrus from, 88 academy. See bet midrash acanthus leaves, 280 Achziv, 417, 418, 421, 422, 458 Acmonia: archisynagogue, 138, 417, 424, 425, 426; archon, 425, 428; frescoes in synagogue, 98, 364, 387; Julia Severa inscription, 8, 11819, 127, 136, 137, 138, 374, 397, 508, 624
Acre, Acco, Akko, 35, 227, 478 Actium: battle of, 373; era, 97, 101 Acts, 1, 47, 286, 546 archisynagogue, 118, 418, 428 Christian community in Damascus, 123 Diaspora Jews in Jerusalem, 5557, 79, 207 gentiles, 242 prayers in Temple, 16768 synagogues, 8, 47, 127, 134; Asia Minor, 8, 82, 113, 11518, 137, 149, 153, 418; Greece, 8, 113, 11518, 418; Jerusalem, 8, 55, 143; near water, 302, 316, 334; pre-70 Diaspora, 48, 113, 11518, 127, 132, 252, 395, 501, 581; sermons, 50, 157, 158, 165, 58182, 630; Torah and prophetic readings, 50, 118, 153, 165, 582 Ada bar Ahava, 291 Adam, 39, 244 Adiabene, 500 adjudication: Alexandria, 86, 93; Babylonia, 288, 291; city-gate, 30, 41; Jerusalem Temple, 93; Patriarchal, 395; Sardis, 395; synagogue, 3, 86, 115, 143, 350, 390, 39596, 411, 442, 504
764 s u b j e c t i n d e x
aedicula, 148, 197, 203, 253, 254, 257, 263, 264, 275, 276, 277, 301, 305, 313, 35455, 357, 358, 360, 375, 379, 618, 641. See also naos; Torah ark, chest, shrine Aegean, 21, 107, 268, 376, 379 Aegina archisynagogue, 268, 417, 424, 435 phrontistes, 425, 435 synagogue, 250, 252, 299, 301, 316, 344, 355; inscription, 268, 270; mosaic oor, 268, 306, 363; orientation, 327 Aelia Capitolina, 208 Aelius Aristides, 142 Afulah, 383 agape, 560 Agatharchides: Jerusalem Temple practice, 28, 165 aggadah, 402, 405, 487, 489, 493, 562, 581, 583, 584, 589, 641 agonothete, 119, 514 Agrippa I, 53, 67, 148, 226, 344 Agrippesians, synagogue of, 84, 105, 136, 285, 414, 427 R. Aa, 347, 403, 476, 482, 489, 495, 570, 581 Ahab, 32, 33 Akko, 35 Alenu, 564 Alexander (alabarch of Alexandria): gift to Temple, 56 Alexander Balas, 125 Alexander Jannaeus, 54 Alexander Severus (emperor), 189, 190, 285, 297, 382, 422 Alexander the Great, xv Alexandria, 67, 77, 90, 92, 100, 147, 298, 642; archisynagogue, 137, 417, 450; Delta Quarter, 132; motif, in House of Leontis, 21718, 219, 620; synagogue/proseuche, 8, 22, 47, 53, 57, 81, 88, 90, 91, 9295, 106, 125, 136, 140, 141, 149, 15657, 159, 170, 184, 206, 207, 211, 264, 339, 343, 345, 347, 405, 433, 438, 503; synagogue as prototype, 62, 616 Alexandrian Jewry, 53, 56, 60, 81, 8990, 93, 94, 96, 97, 107, 116, 118, 127, 131, 146, 285, 286, 293, 297, 41314, 422 Alexandrou-Nesos, 86 aliyah (to Torah), 5067, 526, 539, 540, 577, 641 Alma: inscription, 33637, 373; lintel, 387 altar, 95, 109, 234, 341, 378, 505, 608, 617, 634 ambol/ambon, 343 Ambrose, 298 am ha-aretz, 195, 198, 2089, 456, 476, 558, 574 R. Ami, 184, 187, 340, 368, 371, 399, 406, 478, 482, 490, 537 Amidah, 40, 180, 496, 533, 54050, 641; abbreviated, 54445, 549, 563; in Bible, 54041; blessings, 496, 540, 544, 547, 54849, 567, 568, 57172, 575; in Christian liturgy, 296, 559, 571; evening, 534, 546; geulah prayer, 496, 591; Hellenistic inuences, 163, 541, 630; High Holidays, 548, 549, 564, 584; language, 557; minor festivals, 440; names for, 640, 643; obligatory, 541, 543, 545, 546, 548, 550, 56566; orientation, 326, 339, 377, 379, 532, 553; origin, development of, 1011, 24, 16263, 531, 54050; pass before the ark, 377, 555, 575; and piyyut, 496, 573, 584, 585, 58687, 643; priests, 52627, 556; quorum, 555, 590; recitation, 440, 494, 526, 527, 544, 545, 555, 565, 566, 56768, 570, 575, 585; Sabbath and holidays, 200, 239, 496, 525, 550, 556, 564, 573, 584, 642; and Shema, 180, 496, 502, 542, 548, 553, 555, 556, 557, 565, 573, 591; substitute for sacrices, 200, 240, 546, 570; weekday, daily, 496, 549, 550; women, 502 amphitheater: seating arrangements, 95; as synagogue, 23, 97100, 1012, 1034, 128, 133, 136, 165, 169, 172, 623 R. Amram Gaon, 572, 591, 592 amulets, 9, 17, 242, 295, 408, 409, 453, 603, 623 Ananias of Tiberias, 495 angels, 231, 453, 479, 565, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 580, 601, 605, 606, 608, 639 Antioch archisynagogue, 260, 417, 422, 425 archon, 136 Christian community, 7, 78, 126, 294, 296 97, 298 Jewish community, 12425, 298, 407 synagogue: communal institution (rst century c.e.), 22, 47, 125, 136, 405, 511; communal meals (fourth century), 394;
subject index
destruction (converted into church), 211, 29697, 298; holy place, 125, 133, 165, 17172, 292; theater, 53, 68, 100 tomb of Maccabean martyrs, 126, 29697, 298 Antioch-of-Pisidia archisynagogue, 117, 137 synagogue, 11617, 149; liturgy, 118; and Paul, 117, 132, 153, 157, 418, 581 Antiochus III, 125 Antiochus IV Epiphanes, 126; desecration of Temple, 125, 172, 226; persecutions, xv, 41, 154, 227 Antipater, 113 Antoninus (Caracalla), 136, 198, 359, 388 Antoninus Martyr, 234 Antoninus of Piacenza, 400 Apamea archisynagogue, 260, 417, 424, 425, 437 azzan, 260, 436, 437 synagogue, 250, 25860, 297, 301, 315; converted into church, 211, 258; discovery, 252, 59394; inscriptions, 25860, 508, 51213; mosaic oors, 25859, 299, 306, 362, 373, 387, 424; orientation, 300, 327, 355 Aphek: azzan, 437, 447 Aphrodisias, 6, 403, 46667; inscriptions, 87, 88, 118, 124, 292, 29394, 298, 304, 316, 374, 392, 397, 403, 459, 467, 51415, 523, 588, 624 Aphrodite, bath of, 227, 229, 478, 481 apocrypha, 38, 160, 420 Apollonopolis Magna, 140 apostles (apostoli ), of Patriarch, 42324, 434, 458, 46061, 462, 469 apse. See synagogue architecture Aqedah (Binding of Isaac), 218, 220, 230, 231, 254, 362, 372, 596, 599, 602, 607, 608, 619, 641 R. Aqiva, 348, 350, 455, 479, 495, 539, 544, 553, 582 Arab: iconoclasm, 366; rule, xvi, 36567 Aramaic, 222, 299300, 305, 597; inscriptions, 9, 17, 177, 219, 220, 221, 222, 238, 257, 371, 374, 385, 386, 394, 433, 447, 448, 449, 450, 470, 471, 513, 522, 523, 558, 576, 625, 626; in Jerusalem, 55; in Judaea, 55, 159; piyyutim, 245, 587, 627;
765
prayer, 565, 576, 627; targumim, 13, 159, 160, 162, 579, 627, 642, 643 arana, arona, bet arona, aron, 198, 208, 351, 476. See also Torahark, chest, shrine Arbel, 314, 315, 373; kuppah, 331, 397; synagogue orientation, 195, 196, 199, 323, 335, 355 Arca (Lebanon), 284 Arcadius, 423, 433, 461, 462 arch, 355, 360, 615 archegissa, 510 archisynagogissa, 510 archisynagogue, archisynagogos, 47, 58, 59, 85, 117, 118, 119, 120, 136, 137, 149, 260, 268, 278, 281, 286, 287, 297, 303, 337, 350, 384, 414, 415 27, 428, 430, 433, 434, 435, 437, 439, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 462, 463, 469, 470, 508, 510, 515, 523, 625. See also rosh knesset architecture. See church architecture; orientation of synagogue; synagogue architecture; windows architraves, 275, 360 archives. See library Arch of Titus, 148, 603 archon, 53, 97, 98, 1014, 112, 119, 120, 137, 251, 283, 286, 349, 384, 413, 414, 418, 419, 424, 425, 42728, 430, 431, 43233, 435, 446, 447, 451, 458, 523, 624, 625 Argarizein. See Gerizim, Mt. Argos, 304 Aristides, 405 Arsinoe-Crocodilopolis, 86, 87, 88, 316, 427 art: pagan, 15, 89, 111, 128, 218, 229, 230, 257, 300, 320, 365, 470, 480, 481, 483, 602, 605, 619, 622, 623, 633; Samaritan, 189, 191, 216, 352. See also Christian art; Jewish art artisans, artists, 94, 216, 218, 219, 230, 282, 33637, 373, 467, 484, 595, 596, 600, 619, 622 Asclepius, 292; communal meals, 142; temples, 409, 531, 629 Ashdod: chancel screen, 342; city-gate, 33 R. Ashi, 287, 491 Ashkelon, 114; inscriptions, 239, 447, 449, 513, 524; priestly courses, 239, 524; synagogue, 238, 324, 342, 343, 366, 373, 447, 603 R. Asi, 184, 340, 399, 445, 478, 490, 522
766 s u b j e c t i n d e x
Asia Minor: 11320, 122, 127, 304, 305; Acts, 115 18; archisynagogue, 117, 119, 120, 136, 424, 426, 515; archon, 119; building activity (third century), 193; Christian worship, 293, 559; communal organization, leadership, 11415, 119, 414, 51314, 518; inscriptions, 12, 17, 56, 88, 113, 11617, 11819, 251, 307, 340, 374, 386 87, 467, 505, 508, 509; Jewish communities, 16, 11314, 120, 136, 509; Josephus, 11314; presbyter, 432; synagogues, 1, 56, 81, 82, 114, 11518, 119,20, 129, 139, 141, 165, 171, 302, 332, 340, 374, 397, 505; temple banquet areas, 142 Assalieh, 353 associations, 13031, 642; Greco-Roman, Hellenistic, pagan, 27, 130, 140, 427, 530; Jewish, 85, 114, 130, 13940, 238, 29394, 385; sectarian, 8788, 475. See also collegia; communitas; dekany; avurot; thiasos asylum, 27, 83, 86, 129, 131, 133 Athena, 225, 509 Athens, 268, 304; inscription, 252; synagogue, 116, 251; Temple of Asclepius, 531, 629 Athribis: proseuche, 87, 387 atrium. See synagogue architecture Atzeret. See Shavuot Augustesians, synagogue of, 84, 285, 414, 427, 431, 432, 434 Augustine, 400, 405, 481 Augustus, 84, 90, 95, 105, 115, 136, 141, 148, 284, 285, 423, 524 aula ecclesiae, 193 av bet din, 40, 338, 429, 458, 641 Avitus (archisynagogue), 448 Avodah, 167, 239, 530, 546, 584, 586, 641. See also prayer; sacrices Baba Rabba, 93, 153, 18890, 334, 350, 524; tomb, 126 Babylonia, Babylonian, xv, xvi, 7, 161, 451, 452, 563, 641, 642; calendrical authority, 287, 457; education, 289, 399400, 444; gaonate, geonim, 533, 534, 588, 642; vs. Palestine, 9, 15, 152, 212, 222, 239, 246, 247, 287, 28889, 291, 305, 314, 377, 392, 400, 403, 476, 482, 52728, 536, 564, 566, 56769, 572, 578, 580, 588, 589, 591; rabbinic academies, 291, 303, 395, 476, 564; rabbinic center, 561, 562, 589, 592; rabbis, 28791, 404, 42122, 467, 476, 482, 483, 486, 490, 491, 494, 495, 496, 498, 510, 563, 564, 583, 588, 638; Sassanian, 287, 288, 290, 395, 532; synagogue, 22, 25, 26, 37, 89, 177, 188, 207, 252, 28591, 369, 382, 404, 407, 408, 412, 437, 446, 478, 486, 490, 491, 494, 498, 527, 532, 565, 56769, 582, 627; Targum Onqelos, 580, 592; Torah-reading, 38, 536, 537, 568, 569, 577, 627, 643 bank (in synagogue), 136, 410 banquet hall (andron), 115, 141, 142 Baram synagogue, 177, 193, 207, 242, 315, 316, 322, 323, 359, 366, 380, 617; decorations, 389; gural art, 224, 361; inscriptions, 336, 337, 373; lintel, 336, 337, 387 Barkhu, 58990, 591; quorum, 590 Bar-Kokhba revolt, xvi, 45, 69, 70, 184, 185, 212, 226, 392, 456, 483, 520, 521, 532; coins, 233 Barnabas, 116 Barsauma, 115, 211, 248, 299, 367 Bar Ulla, 317, 437, 494 basilica, 62, 298, 597, 641, 642; Alexandrian synagogue, 9192, 94, 345; civic, 262, 618, 623, 641; Jerusalem Temple, 95; Roman, 10, 324, 616, 633, 641; -type synagogue, 10, 214, 215, 222, 237, 246, 257, 269, 31920, 324, 325, 335, 336, 342, 355, 379, 617, 618 Basilica Aemilia, 92 Basilica Julia, 92 basin (water), 33, 55, 73, 225, 257, 263, 267, 274, 276, 282, 302, 33132, 491, 508 Batanaea, 93 bath, ritual. See miqveh bathhouse, 201, 229, 334, 390, 455, 478, 501 batlanim, 384, 44546 Beersheba city-gate, 32, 33 Be Govar, synagogue of, 495 Beirut, 356; archisynagogue, 417 R. Benaya, 488 benefactor. See donor, donation Benjamin of Tudela, 152 Ben Sira: Amidah, 163, 541, 543; Jewish religious leadership, 27; sanctity of Prophets and Torah, 154; synagogue as congregation, 23; synagogue building, 27, 41 Berea: Paul and women, 117, 501; synagogue, 116
subject index
R. Berekhiah, 491, 495 Berenice (Cyrene): amphitheater, 97, 98, 99 100, 103, 136, 145; archisynagogue, 508; archon, 9798, 102, 103, 136, 427, 433; inscriptions, 1, 8, 83, 96104, 11617, 127, 137, 37273; Jewish community and communal organization, 9798, 1012, 104, 129, 13132, 136, 145, 414, 427; politeuma, 9697, 98, 100, 101, 103, 104, 127, 129, 131, 286; priest, 104, 137, 522; synagogue, 1, 96104, 111, 120, 145, 427, 508 Berenice (wife of Ptolemy III), 83, 225 Beryllos of Caesarea (archisynagogue), 435, 448, 449 Berytus, 298 Bet Alpha, 211, 333, 356 basilica-type synagogue, plan, 10, 215, 223, 319, 320, 330, 34445, 346, 355 coins, 356, 397 discovery of, 224, 320, 593 mosaic, 218, 219, 223, 344, 596, 599, 608, 611; Aqedah, 218, 231, 362, 372, 389, 595, 598, 602, 619; artistic motifs, 216, 218, 307; Helios and zodiac, 218, 219, 224, 306, 361 62, 372, 389, 596, 602; inscriptions, 219, 373, 447; Jewish symbols, 218, 236, 305, 307, 357, 358, 597, 602, 633 bet am, 23, 195, 198, 208, 381, 476 Betar, synagogues: number, 206; schools, 398 Bet Guvrin, 74, 340, 371, 387 Beth-el, sanctuary, 189, 225 Bet Hillel: Amidah, 543, 549, 550; blessings, 167; charity, 144; synagogue, 381 bet knesset, 487; denition, 26 bet midrash (rabbinic academy), 60, 162, 180, 181, 193, 287, 317, 331, 337, 340, 341, 348, 384, 392, 398, 407, 410, 411, 441, 445, 457, 458, 487, 497, 501, 530, 557, 566, 586, 641, 642; preaching, 344, 348, 487, 48889, 58182, 583, 627; vs. synagogue, 47678; Torah study, 289, 344, 400, 401, 403, 477, 580 Bet Shammai: Amidah, 543, 549; blessings, 167; charity, 144; and oni Haqatan, 167, 54950; Shema, 591; synagogue, 381 Bet Shean: Bet Shean A (north), 177, 199, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 232, 233, 315, 328, 355, 369; Bet Shean B (Leontis), 215, 217, 218, 220, 224,
767
319, 388, 405, 620; inscriptions, 238, 388, 627; Jewish community, 230, 414, 447, 449; synagogues and area in general, 11, 183, 186, 187, 207, 216, 219, 246, 307, 324, 328, 332, 333, 342, 357, 359, 361, 373, 385, 387, 490, 491, 524, 627, 632 Bet Shearim, 187, 331, 340, 485, 612; archisynagogue, 448; bima, 345, 376; catacombs, 481, 593; coins, 397; gural art, 224, 22627, 361; inscriptions, 270, 384, 392, 445; Jewish symbols, 326, 357; orientation, 327, 328, 347; priest, priestess, 510, 521; texts with pagan connotations, 123 bet talmud, 404 Bezalel, 244 Bilam, 82 bima. See synagogue architecture Binding of Isaac. See Aqedah Binyamina, 432 birkat hamazon (grace after meals), 292, 393, 394, 502, 641 Bithynia, 434, 552 Black Sea, 120, 121, 418 blessings, benedictions, 91, 149, 163, 167, 168, 205, 219, 254, 374, 386, 406, 408, 440, 502, 533, 547, 548, 549, 550, 556, 564, 568, 570, 574, 589, 608, 643; Amidah, 163, 496, 531, 54041, 544, 546, 547, 548, 549, 555, 562, 567, 568, 572, 575, 586; barefoot, 199, 526; Christian, 55960, 630; geulah (redemption), 547, 591; haftarah, 556, 567, 591; priestly, 167, 168, 209, 37576, 378, 380, 407, 439, 475, 502, 526 27, 528, 550, 555, 556, 557, 565, 568, 587, 590, 634, 640; in Qedushah, 57475; at Qumran, 6465; sanctus, 560; Shema, 496, 531, 542, 548, 550, 551, 552, 553, 555, 562, 563, 565, 566, 567, 569, 571, 573, 574, 630, 644; Torah, 168, 438, 539, 540, 556, 577, 641 Boaz, at city-gate, 31 Book of Court Cases (Literature of Court Cases), 240 Bordeaux Pilgrim, 208 Bosphorus, 12124; God-fearers, 123, 132; inscriptions, 1, 8, 85, 12122, 123, 127, 138, 143, 169, 293, 372, 624; Jewish community, 121, 169; manumission of slaves, 121, 122, 123, 127, 129, 133, 143, 169, 372, 396; synagoge as com-
768
subject index
Cairo Genizah gural art, 362, 483, 621 magic texts, 17, 409 Sifrut Ha-maasim, 240, 588 synagogue texts, 13, 14, 208, 213, 214; ambol, 343; atrium, 330; cathedra, 351; ritual function of lights, 35657; separation of sexes, 503, 517; water installations, 302, 333 and synagogue worship, 11, 568, 570 Torah reading, targumim, 11, 152, 159, 160, 161, 536, 579 Calcaresians, synagogue of, 284, 285, 427, 430, 434 calendrical authority, 287, 392, 457 Caligula, xvi, 66, 67 Callinicum synagogue, converted into church, 211, 298 Campania, 425 Campesians, synagogue of, 284, 285, 430, 432 canonization (of the Bible), 484 Capernaum synagogue, 46, 5152, 71, 177, 185, 186, 195, 211, 213, 261, 305, 330, 331, 338, 373; articial podium, 193, 315; artistic motifs, decorations, 319, 323, 361, 365, 389, 599; capital with menorah, 362, 363; column, 340, 342, 387; dating, 71, 177, 213, 215, 319, 320; and Jesus, 49, 51; and the Roman centurion, 51, 52, 110, 388; stone carvings, 360, 361 capitals, 69, 105, 320, 342, 343, 360, 362, 363, 603 Capitolina, 374, 509 Cappadocia, Cappadocians: synagogue in Sepphoris, 207, 515 Capua, 100, 300, 417, 428 Caracalla, 84, 136, 198, 359, 388. See also Antoninus cardo (maximus), 258, 269, 642 Caria, 343, 387, 417, 509 Carmel, 10, 177, 327, 328, 362, 385 Carthage, 251, 303, 417 Cassius Dio, 405 Castel Porziano, 430 catacombs, 597. See also Jewish art Bet Shearim: gural art, 481 Rome, 28385, 593; dating of, 183, 284; decorations, 111, 284, 623; gold glass fragments, 235, 284, 307, 352, 358, 623; inscriptions, 8, 12, 84, 105, 106, 107, 179, 251,
Bosphorus (continued ) munity, 1, 122, 123; synagogue, 82, 118, 143, 169, 396, 624 Bostra Archisynagogue (rosh knesset), 337, 417, 418, 421, 422 nymphaeum, 228, 481 synagogue, 207; benches, 476; charity, 292, 398; functionaries, 383, 422, 436, 442, 443, 458, 490 boule, 273, 641, 642; of Tiberias, 207, 489 bouleuterion, 55, 324, 616, 642 bouleutes, 624 Bova Marina, 250, 252, 279, 280, 292, 299, 301, 316, 355 Brescia, 300, 417, 431 Brixians, synagogue of, 431, 432 broadhouse (transitional) synagogue, 10, 74, 215, 267, 319, 320, 321, 322, 325, 328 Bronze Age city-gate, 32 Bruria, 500 Brusciano, 303 burial, 39, 130, 283, 284, 296, 300, 301, 397, 407, 421, 437, 443, 603, 639; societies, 85, 87, 140, 294, 392 Byzantine Empire, 3, 214; ascendancy of Christian church, 4, 245; building and repairing synagogues, 191, 212, 321; and Jewish community, 294, 308 Caesarea, 214; archisynagogue, 417, 435, 448, 449; building activities (third century), 186, 192; city-gate, 35, 36; Greek-speaking community, 2078, 388, 449, 473, 563, 627, 632; inscriptions, 142, 221, 318, 385, 388, 394, 417, 424, 432, 447, 448, 449, 450, 624; Jewish community, 7778, 147, 148, 207, 293, 385, 388, 414; judicial setting, 39596, 486, 489; Maradata synagogue, 207, 391, 395, 407, 489; mithraeum, 142; non-Jewish activity, 68, 75, 77; phrontistes, 425, 435, 448; presbyter, 432, 448; priests, 239, 520, 524, 525; theater, 495; triclinium, 318, 387, 394, 424 Caesarea, synagogue, 8, 11, 46, 68, 76, 185, 221, 238, 239, 306, 324, 342; conversion into odeum, 68, 126, 184; mosaic oor, 387; near water, 305, 334
subject index
283, 284, 285, 286, 300, 304, 414, 427, 434, 515; Jewish symbols, 301, 307, 352, 358 cathedra. See Seat, Cathedra, of Moses Cave of Machpelah, 39, 234 chancel screen, 263, 264, 279, 34142, 371, 387, 424, 508, 603, 61718, 642, 643 charity, 29, 59, 75, 111, 144, 339, 385, 39698; kuppah (charity box), 283, 292, 331, 397; ocial, 390, 397, 398; tamui (charity plate), 397 Chersonesus (Crimea) synagogue, 121, 251 chora, 90, 134, 156, 642 Chorazim synagogue, 46, 72, 177, 195, 215, 314, 342, 345, 347, 354, 361, 389, 397; articial podium, 315; dating, 319, 32122; gural art, 224, 323, 361; Seat of Moses, 346, 349; stone carvings, 360, 361 Choricius of Gaza, 597, 600 Christian art, 15, 59798, 605, 610, 623, 625, 63335 Christian literature: archisynagogue, 41820, 446; archon, 428; prayer, 166, 559, 560, 575; presbyter, 432 Christians, 39, 158, 176, 209, 211, 230, 367, 410, 422, 516, 524; building activity, 19293, 242; clergy, 295; persecution of, 193, 293; scholars, on Judaism and synagogue, 1314, 558; and synagogue, 6, 78, 116, 118, 126, 209, 211, 235, 24546, 293, 29495, 296, 298, 4089; women, 294 chronology of synagogue building, 10, 214, 32021 church architecture, 629, 631, 633, 634; cathedrae, 350, 617; chancel screens, 34142, 61718; diaconicon, 634; fountain, 333; presbyterium, 617, 634; prothesis, 634 churches, 3, 243, 249, 28182, 410, 596, 641, 642, 643; Antioch, 6, 297; art, 267, 281, 59798, 600, 605, 611, 61922, 633, 634; building of, 19293, 242, 245, 460, 631; Byzantine period, 4, 214, 215, 216, 23031, 247, 259, 320, 325, 338, 341, 34445, 350, 376, 385, 396, 405, 587, 615, 631, 634, 639, 643; communal meals, 115, 142, 293; converted from synagogues, 77, 126, 211, 248, 251, 257, 258, 270, 273, 282, 297, 298, 308, 339, 431, 61922; hierarchy, 341, 350, 516, 617, 634, 639, 640; iconoclasm, 36667; impact
769
on synagogue, 4, 230, 325, 329, 338, 34445, 376, 379, 390, 605, 611, 615, 617, 619, 629, 631; Jerusalem, 55, 115, 242, 631; liturgy, 531, 558 61, 573, 598, 626, 628, 634, 639; orientation, 197, 329, 633; in private homes, 176, 185, 266, 272, 618, religio illicita, 185; sanctity, 24445, 247, 248, 271, 333, 631, 634, 639; sermons, 581 82; Syrian, 376, 615; women, 499, 510, 517, 518 church fathers, 235, 582; gural art, 481, 597; Patriarchate, 45455, 460, 469; rabbis and synagogue, 9, 193, 252, 293, 29498, 347, 409, 418, 419, 426, 469, 502, 511, 517; sermons, 586; women, 502, 511, 517 Church of St. Apollonia, 352 Church of St. Peter, 213 Church of St. Stephen, 252, 298 Church of the Holy Sepulchre, 244 Cicero, 57 Cilicia, Cilicians: Jewish community, 56; Joseph the Comes and Patriarchal activity, 240, 383, 419, 46061; Paul, 56; synagogue in Jerusalem, 207 circumcision, 41, 296 Circus Maximus, 100 Cirta (Numidia), church in, 405 cistern, stepped, 55, 63, 333, 334, 642. See also miqveh city-gate, forerunner of synagogue, 2834; biblical period, 2932, 42; functions, 3034, 35, 43; Hellenistic period, 3438, 42; post-Exilic period, 3234; Susannah (book), 41 City of David, 57, 199 Claudiopolis (Tiberias), 53 Claudius, 53, 66 Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos, 217, 270, 318, 372, 388, 389, 405, 42930 Clement of Alexandria, 573 Clement of Rome, 573 Cleopatra, 83 coins. See numismatic evidence collegia, 14, 95, 107, 130, 131, 136, 173, 278, 429, 618, 642. See also associations colonnades. See synagogue architecture columns, pillars. See synagogue architecture comes, 240, 265, 419, 448, 460, 624 Commodus, 189
770
subject index
Day of Atonement. See Yom Kippur deacon, 260, 385, 436, 437, 516, 611, 642 Dead Sea, 321, 482; scrolls (Amidah), 163, 169, 541; sect, 155 Deborah (biblical gure), 516 Decalogue, 383, 481, 531, 550, 551, 552, 553 Decimus Valerius Dionysios, 97, 98, 99, 135 decorations (in synagogue), 98, 99, 109, 111, 119, 21617, 220, 221, 26970, 279, 282, 301, 313, 345, 36064, 37071, 379, 389, 471, 480, 484, 508, 509, 600, 611, 618, 622, 623, 637, 639 defensor civitatis, 304 dekany, 87, 88, 294, 392, 397, 403, 515. See also associations dekaprotos, 514 Delos Jewry, status of, 106, 111, 112, 132 Delos synagogue, 16, 81, 10713, 111, 127, 132, 171, 316, 319, 618; archaeological evidence, 21, 111, 127, 128, 169, 172, 204, 250, 307, 331; communal meals, 106, 112, 318; inscriptions, 8, 85, 109, 110, 127, 128, 140; mosaics, 36263; near water, 108, 109, 114, 302, 305, 334; orientation, 109, 327; proseuche, 1, 109, 110, 138, 140, 418; Seat of Moses, 109, 34849; theos hypsistos, 109, 128; water installation, 108, 109, 331 Delphi, 122, 134, 509, 624 Demetrius, 120, 125, 126 demiourgos, 514 demos, in polis, 53, 431 derashot. See sermon Dertona (Spain) synagogue, converted into church, 298 diakonoi, 260, 419, 642 Didascalia Apostolorum, 516 didaskaleion, 90, 172 didaskalos, 303, 425 Dierences in Customs, 532, 536, 568, 577, 588, 589 e-Dikke, 316, 324, 353, 361 R. Dimi, 35253, 444 Diocletian, 192, 193 divine presence. See Shekhinah Domitian, 148 domus dei, 639 domus ecclesiae, 185, 193, 277, 639. See also private home donor, donation, at synagogue, 84, 121, 258
communitas, 130. See also associations Como, 411, 443 conch (shell-shaped motif ), 352, 357, 642 Constantine, xvi, 175, 190, 242, 244, 245, 247, 333, 419, 423, 46162, 464, 523 Constantinople, 160, 190, 244, 586; synagogue destruction, 211; tomb of Baba Rabba, 126, 190 Constantius, 190, 462 corbels, 275 Corinth, 98; archisynagogue, 117, 303, 417, 418; didaskalos, 303; inscriptions, 252, 303, 417; synagogue, 105, 116 court. See adjudication courtyard: Jerusalem Temple, 204, 225, 344, 504; Nabatean temple, 324, 616, 633. See also synagogue architecture Crete, 417, 425, 432, 510, 515 Crimea, 121, 251, 294, 307, 413 Crispus (archisynagogue in Corinth), 117, 418 cross, xvi, 230, 366, 604, 619, 623, 633 Cumanus, 66, 147 Cybele (North Africa), 405 Cyprus, 17, 303, 388, 417, 428, 432 Cyrene. See Berenice (Cyrene) Cyreneans: synagogue in Jerusalem, 56, 207 Cyril of Alexandria, 298 Cyril of Jerusalem, 243, 244, 499 Dabbura, 361; column, 340, 387; lintel, 361; portal, 336, 387 Dalton, 349, 350 Damascus: Christian community in synagogues, 295, 298; pagan women, 12627, 132, 501; synagogues, 115, 126 Damascus Document (Codex Damascus): house of prostration, 64, 65; synagogues in Judaea, 46 Dan: city-gate, 30, 32, 33, 34; sanctuary, 225 Daniel (biblical gure), 221, 230, 231, 362, 372 Daniel (synagogue in Babylonia), 291 Danube region, 425 Daphne: conversion of synagogue into theater, 126, 184; healing, 292, 409 David (biblical), 345, 478, 567; biblical motif, 230, 231, 232, 254, 362, 372, 549; city-gate, 31; holy ark in Jerusalem, 203; inscriptions, 362
subject index
60, 339, 340, 359, 371, 394, 396, 611, 625; community, 374, 38586, 448, 576, 595, 596; functionaries, 25960, 265, 271, 374, 424, 445; individuals, 87, 102, 1034, 137, 258, 26465, 266, 359, 373, 374, 385, 386, 397, 459, 5078, 576, 595, 596; non-Jews, 110, 119, 120, 13132, 198, 359, 373, 374; priests, 445, 52223; rabbis, 337, 470, 472, 39798; women, 104, 5079, 51213 doors, doorposts, doorways. See synagogue architecture; see also entrances Dor, 68 city-gate, 33, 35 pagan, pagans, 67, 77; anti-Jewish activity, 8, 67, 75, 77; city, 35 synagogue, 46, 6667, 75, 77, 78, 139, 185 R. Dosa b. Hyrcanus, 208 R. Drusai, 348 dukhan, 375, 527. See also synagogue architecturebima Dura Europos: church, 596; mithraeum, 622; temple, 62, 616, 618, 622, 624 Dura Europos synagogue, 59, 144, 195, 250, 25257, 267, 292, 316, 388, 389 aedicula, Torah shrine, 148, 253, 254, 257, 301, 305, 349, 355, 358, 379, 618 arana, 198, 208, 351, 476 archon, presbyter, priest, 137, 349, 432, 433, 523 art and architecture, 14748, 302, 316, 318, 330, 332, 343, 379, 622, 634 benches, 94, 253, 337, 349, 370, 473 birkat hamazon fragment, 292, 394 converted from private home, 185, 299, 318, 326, 618 discovery, 1112, 224, 252, 256, 593, 594 excavations, 11, 15, 94, 252 frescoes, 98, 120, 25356, 353, 364, 364, 484, 593, 59596, 598; artistic motifs, 111, 25456, 299, 597, 599, 61112, 622; artists and rabbis, 256, 46668, 470, 599; biblical motifs and scenes, 230, 25456, 306, 307, 353, 532, 595, 607; Jewish symbols, 3067, 358, 532, 595, 597; Temple-related representations, 233, 241, 254 inscriptions, 257, 321, 351, 372, 373, 432, 433, 513, 625 orientation, 300, 327 Seat of Moses, 34849, 350 women, 503, 512, 513 dyplastoon. See synagogue architecture
771
eagle table (at Sardis), 26364, 265, 266, 332, 623 East, 43, 250, 295, 512, 513, 560, 561, 597, 621, 622, 636; languages, 305, 625 Ebionites, 419, 426, 433 ecclesiasterion, 55, 62, 75, 324 edah, 23, 139 Edessa, 298 cathedral, 244 synagogue converted into church, 211, 252 education. See instruction, school, education Egeria, 244 Egypt, Egyptian, 22, 68, 82, 134, 171, 184, 192, 254, 405, 553, 615; Byzantine, 571; Hellenistic and Roman, 26, 81, 83, 87, 130, 138, 164, 170, 331, 349, 397, 552, 624; inscriptions, 8, 12, 17, 21, 8286, 87, 8889, 127, 133, 137, 307, 349; Jewish community, 83, 84, 87, 97, 156, 414, 450, 504; names, 103, 111, 129; pogroms of 38 c.e., 8, 90; Ptolemaic, 21, 22, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 91, 105, 111, 129, 130, 136, 170; Sambathic association, 88; Therapeutae, 89, 141, 153, 156, 157, 543; Torah scrolls and pagan statues, 147; twelfth-century, 152; women, 504, 508 Egyptian papyri, 89, 122; Alexandrou-Neso, 86; Arsinoe-Crocodilopolis, 86, 88; Delta Quarter, 132; Nash, 166, 552; Oxyrhynchus, 588; pre-70 synagogue, 8283 Egyptian synagogue/proseuche, 21, 22, 78, 8296, 129, 136, 138, 140, 164, 170, 171, 300, 387, 397, 623 holy place, sanctity of, 85, 86, 133, 165, 170, 172 leadership, 93; archisynagogue, 85, 137, 417, 422, 426; azzan, 91, 136; nakoros, 85, 86, 136; pater synagoges, 429; phrontistes, 435; priestess, 510; priests, 137; prostates, 136 liturgy, 139, 156 near water, 88, 114 origin, 21, 22, 26, 79 prayer, 166, 170, 316, 552, 571 proseuche as building, 1
772
subject index
R. Eliezer ismah, 546 Elijah (biblical), 50 Elisha (biblical), 50, 255, 429 Elisha b. Abuya, 400 Elkesaites, 326 Emerita: rabbi, 303; super orans, 304, 588 Emesa, 387 Emmaus, 373 En Gedi azzan, 437 menorah, 358, 603, 604 synagogue, 11, 144, 177, 183, 186, 187, 195, 196, 207, 211, 316, 331, 332, 337, 342, 345, 347, 350, 355, 632; gural art, 222, 224, 306, 361, 362, 367, 471, 6067; inscription, 372, 386, 387, 38990, 497; Jewish symbols, 306; Seat of Moses, 349; zodiac, 372, 606 En Neshut, 315, 316, 354, 473 Enoch, 42, 573 En Samsam, 361 entrances: study near, 486; women, in Temple, 503. See also synagogue architecture Ephesus, 266; archisynagogue, 417; Jewry, 115; synagogue, 116, 118; Temple of Asia, 514; theater, 53, 100 Ephrem, 293, 628 Ephron the Hittite, at city-gate, 30 Epiphanius, 9, 100, 143, 184, 209, 325, 326, 395, 418, 419, 426, 433, 46061, 469, 481, 524, 601; and Patriarch, 240, 383, 390, 46061, 464 Esarhaddon, 553 eschatology, 155, 280, 599, 604 Eshtemoa priests, 137 synagogue, 10, 177, 199, 215, 305, 314, 316, 319, 324, 333, 346, 355, 473; discovery, 320; inscription, 522; menorah, 358, 603; orientation, 196, 324, 335, 346 Essenes, 51; communal meals, 65, 115, 141; communal prayer, 64, 167, 169; Josephus, described by, 31, 65, 302, 475; Judaea, 66, 152, 153, 167, 170; Philo, described by, 6566, 133, 141, 149, 152; Qumran, 6366, 142, 152; study, 64, 11617, 152, 156; Torah reading on Sabbath, 64, 149, 152; worship, 8, 6364, 65, 66 Esther (book), dating, 26
Egyptian synagogue/proseuche, (continued ) separate seating, 517 sermon, 157 statue bases, 8889, 111, 364 sundial, 87, 331 targum, 159 temenos, 83 Torah reading, 91, 94, 95, 146, 151 Elaea, Elaeans, synagogue of, 284, 430 R. Elazar (second century), 184, 340, 407, 436, 549 R. Elazar (son of R. Yosi the Galilean), 554 R. Elazar b. Arakh, 348 R. Elazar b. Azariah, 521 R. El azar b. Pedat, 570 R. Elazar b. R. Simeon, 487 R. Elazar b. R. Zadoq, 60 Elche archon, 283, 428, 433 presbyter, 283, 339, 428, 432, 433 synagogue, 250, 252, 28183, 316; apse, 301, 305, 355; charity box, 292, 331; converted into church, 000; inscriptions, 283, 339, 428; mosaics, 282, 283, 299, 36263, 428, 622; seating, 433 elders, 24, 429, 43234, 46061, 544, 642; Alexandrian synagogue, 91, 93; and archisynagogue, 416, 417, 424, 434; Bet Shammai, 167, 549; at city-gate, 30, 31, 41; collection of monies, 416, 424; Dura Europos, 137, 432, 433, 523; early Torah reading, 89, 150, 156; on fast day, 289, 495; inscriptions, 5859, 432, 433; priest, 523; Samaritan, 188; Theodosian Code, 43334; Theodotos inscription, 58 59, 432; women, 511, 516. See also elders and synagogue; presbyter; presbytera elders and synagogue: and Amidah, 549; gathering in, 25; instruction, 89, 156, 157; prayer leader, 289, 558; preacher, 556; seating, 66, 93, 197, 237, 247, 263, 33839, 348, 350, 433, 473, 509, 567 elders of the south, 457 Elephantine: temple, 3, 151; texts with pagan elements, 123 Eliezer, Elazar Ha-Qallir, 13, 586 R. Eliezer b. Azariah, 545 R. Eliezer b. Hyrcanus, 348, 495
subject index
ethrog, 199, 216, 232, 234, 235, 251, 257, 267, 275, 279, 283, 284, 362, 377, 602, 608, 633, 642 Eucharist, 51, 530, 560, 561, 573, 598, 634 eucheion, 23, 85, 88 eulogies (in synagogue), 104, 407, 486 Euphrates, 298, 595 Europe, 13, 17, 252, 327, 413 Eusebius, 192, 243, 244, 248, 333, 401, 426 exarchon, 304, 428 exedra, 87, 204, 262, 263, 642 Exilarch, Exilarchate, 288, 289, 290, 567, 569, 642 Exodus: biblical motif, 254, 551, 553 Ezekias (high priest): Torah reading in Egypt, 27, 151 Ezekiel: biblical motif, 25, 254, 256, 349, 456; scroll fragments, 62 Ezra, xv, 521; city-gate, 32, 36; origin of synagogue, 22, 25; targum, 160; Torah-reading ceremony, 23, 25, 26, 32, 36, 150, 254, 344, 537, 538 facades, 69, 193, 195, 217, 222, 231, 232, 233, 235, 246, 248, 251, 254, 314, 319, 323, 324, 325, 326, 329, 335, 360, 371, 379, 532, 597, 615, 616, 617, 619, 642 fast days, public, 40; elder, 289, 558; azzan, 205, 377, 439, 440, 441; John Chrysostom, 235, 296; Judaean synagogue (sixth century b.c.e.), 25; priestly blessing, priests, 205, 439, 519, 565, 568; rabbis, 205, 289, 439, 49495, 519, 539, 558; Tiberias, 5253, 54, 75, 165; Torah reading, 201, 53637. See also fast days, synagogue fast days, synagogue: ritual, 23, 296, 393, 476, 482, 495, 558, 565; and Temple, 174, 205, 393, 439, 539, 548; tevah, 352 rstfruits, 40, 106, 240, 241, 460, 461, 505, 608 First Temple, xv, 244; destruction, xv, 25, 174; gural art, 236 First Temple period, xv; city-gate, 35; gural art, 225; origin of synagogue, 22, 24, 26 Flaccus, 90 agstone oors. See synagogue architecture ogging, in synagogue, 143, 395, 403, 442 Florus, 68, 147 forecourt. See synagogue architecture
773
fountains. See synagogue architecture France (eleventh century), 345 freedmen (Libertines), 98, 120, 278, 373; synagogue in Jerusalem, 56 frescoes, 70, 224, 233, 253, 255, 257, 272, 273, 360, 364, 593, 59596, 598, 619, 642 friezes, 325, 360, 361, 615 funds, sacred, 172, 397 funerary meals, 440 furnishings, of synagogue interior, 179, 337; main hall, 33740, 34760, 445; sanctity, degrees of, 36871 gabbai, 376 gable, 325, 352, 354, 357, 360, 361, 642; Syrian, 615 Gadara, 324, 400 Gaius Caesar, 106. See also Julius Caesar Gaius Julius Justus, 278, 430 Galileans, 186, 396, 421, 456, 464, 492 Galilean synagogue: construction and Patriarch, 18386, 32324, 460, 464; dating, 17677, 18386, 32122; iconoclasm, 366; orientation, 19798, 313, 473, 532; women, 512 Galilean-type synagogue, 93, 96, 365, 593; art, architecture, 10, 109, 246, 274, 306, 321, 323, 325, 349, 35355, 357, 36062, 389, 481, 532, 611, 61417, 632, 633; dating, 10, 14, 31920, 32123; location, 193, 315; orientation, 109, 195, 237, 319, 32628, 335 Galilee, Galileans, 45, 4655, 79, 156, 492; archisynagogue, rosh knesset, 13738, 417, 421; fast-day ceremony, 205, 439, 519; Greek, 627, 632; Hebrew, 371; Jesus in synagogues, 8, 4647, 4852, 78, 118, 500501; Jewish settlement/community, 70, 188, 230, 245, 297, 313, 327, 497, 611, 614; Josephus, 52; Patriarch, 45557, 464; priestly courses, 521, 52425, 587; priests, 51920, 521, 523, 587; rabbis, 205, 46768, 558; and Temple, 169, 175 Galilee, Sea of, 33, 246, 336, 342, 361 Galla Placidia (mausoleum), 352 Gallus Revolt, xvi, 490 Gamla: miqveh, 55, 63, 75, 333; orientation, 54, 327; synagogue, 3738, 46, 5455, 69, 70, 71, 73, 75, 76, 94, 109, 140, 169, 172, 185, 314, 318, 337, 512
774
subject index
Great Synagogue (in Sepphoris), 207, 488 Greek (language): inscriptions, 9, 17, 84, 96, 1012, 11920, 133, 179, 218, 219, 221, 222, 238, 257, 258, 260, 264, 268, 269, 27071, 276, 297, 299300, 305, 318, 353, 355, 356, 366, 371, 373, 374, 385, 388, 44850, 459, 513, 523, 576, 608, 610, 625, 632; in Jerusalem, 55, 58, 448; in liturgy, 159, 163, 530, 541, 583, 62628, 630; names, terms, titles, 98, 102, 1034, 111, 120, 122, 129, 13233, 139, 257, 26566, 270, 271, 318, 343, 351, 355, 356, 388, 417, 420, 424, 428, 431, 433, 437, 44849, 45152, 513, 530, 608, 625, 628; Septuagint, 139, 146, 151, 156, 157, 159; Shema, recitation of, 208, 473, 563, 627; -speaking communities in Palestine, 55, 2078, 473, 563, 597, 625, 62627; targumim, 159, 578, 643; Torah reading, 38, 157, 578, 626, 642 Greeks, 12526, 129, 338, 624 Greek synagogues, 8, 82, 113, 117, 11819, 127, 139, 250, 268, 428; temples, 142 Gregory, 211, 598 Grove of Camenae, 285 guilds. See associations gulta, sanctity of, 369 Gush alav synagogue, 177, 183, 187, 196, 2067, 314, 315, 316, 321, 340, 345, 354, 360, 361; orientation, 196, 237 gymnasiarch, 514 Hadrian, 46, 18485, 212, 422 Hadrianeum, 184 Hadutha, Hadutaha, 239 haftarah reading, 15355, 380, 441, 474, 569, 57778, 590, 642; Antioch-of-Pisidia, 153, 418; Babylonia, 537, 567; blessings, 567, 591; Byzantine period, 640; Jesus in Nazareth, 153; language, 558, 569; quorum of ten, 55556, 590; rabbinic involvement, 491, 492, 577, 578; rabbinic literature, 153, 154, 506, 537, 538, 555 56, 578, 590; Sabbaths and holidays, 538, 556, 582; and sermon, 153, 154, 348, 375, 378, 582; study of, 398; and targum, 578; and Torah reading, 153, 154, 165, 180, 222, 287, 375, 418, 537, 57778, 582 R. aggai (of Tiberias), 246, 400 Hagia Sophia, 244, 379
Gaul synagogue, 192; converted into church, 211 Gaza: basilica, 298; church decoration, 597, 600; Marneion, 611 Gaza synagogue (Byzantine), 11, 93, 261, 324, 355; biblical gures, 231, 232, 362, 372, 598; chancel screen, 342; inscriptions, 238, 373, 513; mosaic oors, 224, 230, 387, 619; near water, 305, 334; priestly courses, 239; water installations, 331; workshop, 230, 619, 623 gedolei ha-dor, 421, 422, 425 Genesis apocryphon, 160 Genizah. See Cairo Genizah geonim, 534, 588 Gerasa basilical synagogue, 10, 186, 250, 25758, 274, 292, 301; converted into church, 211, 258; discovery, 252, 257, 594; inscriptions, 238, 257, 258, 302, 371; location: 257, 315; mosaics, 257, 258, 362, 363, 372; orientation, 300, 327; water installations, 257, 330, 33132 Gerizim, Mt., 110, 322, 328; city-gate, 33; synagogue, 189, 334, 350 Germanus (bishop), 639 gerousia, 127, 271, 286, 413, 514, 642 gerousiarch, 259, 260, 278, 286, 413, 414, 430, 510 Geta (emperor), 84 Gezer city-gate, 33 Gilead, 32 Ginat Gate (Jerusalem), 35 gizbarit (treasurer), 510 God-fearers, 123, 124, 29394, 374, 509, 643. See also theosebeis Golan: Jewish settlement, 5, 313; synagogues, 10, 11, 46, 55, 177, 183, 211, 212, 215, 221, 222, 246, 306, 315, 321, 322, 324, 335, 340, 353, 355, 360, 361, 366, 368, 371, 394, 447, 594, 611, 615, 632; orientation of, 32728, 335, 389 gold glass, 235, 284, 307, 352, 358, 623 Golgoi (Cyprus), 388 Golgotha, xvi, 39, 244 Gophna (synagogue in Sepphoris), 207 Gordianus (emperor), 190 Gorgippia (modern Anape) inscriptions, 122, 123 R. Gorion, 187 grace after meals. See birkat hamazon grammateus, 414, 43435, 443, 446, 451, 511 great men of the generation. See gedolei ha-dor
subject index
hagios topos, 23, 238 Haifa, 627 R. alafta, 205, 495, 501, 557, 558 halakha, 444, 487, 489, 581, 592; study of, 478 Halicarnassus: Jews, 114, 140; synagogue functions, 194 Hallel: psalms, 554, 565; recitation, 402, 486, 55354, 556, 565, 591, 642 R. ama bar anina, 187, 383 ammam Lif. See Naro ammat Gader, 457 baths, 367, 373 and Patriarch, 460 synagogue, 177, 187, 211, 315, 316, 342, 355; basilical, 10; inscriptions, 179, 371, 385, 513, 576; mosaic oors, 387 ammat Tiberias synagogue, 144, 177, 187, 193, 195, 207, 211, 215, 316, 330, 339, 354, 355, 379, 382, 485, 503; art generally, 191, 359, 594; chancel screen, 342; coins, 397; gural art, 216, 3056, 367, 474, 475, 484, 611; Helios and the zodiac, 224, 229, 361, 372, 471, 474, 475, 484, 596, 600, 601, 602, 605; holy place, 238, 385; inscriptions, 179, 238, 373, 385, 388, 447, 449, 625; Jewish symbols, 234, 306, 307, 633; menorah, 358, 484, 485, 603; mosaics, 224, 229, 234, 307, 344, 354, 359, 362, 372, 471, 475, 594, 596, 605, 61112; orientation, 196, 347; and rabbis, 487; Seat of Moses, 34849 ananiah (Babylonia), 287, 392, 457 anina (son of Marianos), 218, 219, 373 R. anina (son of R. Gamaliel II), 458, 478 R. anina bar ama, 383, 470, 474, 495 anina ben Lizar, 321 R. anina b. R. Aa, 581 anania (nephew of R. Joshua b. anania), 457 R. anania b. Teradion, 205, 495, 558 Hanukkah, 440, 537, 554, 591, 637 Haqhel, 43, 95, 344, 420, 438, 441, 538, 642 ashmunit synagogue (Antioch), 126 asidim: early synagogue, 23, 24, 42 Hasmoneans, 76, 161, 226, 500, 516 havdalah, 564 avurot, 115, 141; holy avurah, 238. See also associations Hazor city-gate, 33 azzan, 43542, 443, 447, 452; in academy, 348;
775
communal functionary, 37, 260, 260, 380, 383, 384, 391, 395, 43539, 469, 490; in Diaspora, 287, 28889, 450, 461; liturgical functionary, 40, 91, 149, 165, 205, 28889, 338, 37678, 408, 414, 419, 42021, 43942, 446, 458, 493 94, 512, 585, 591; living quarters, 315, 318, 343, 406, 436, 504; and Temple, 42021, 43839. See also azzan knesset; hazzanu azzan knesset, 43, 421 hazzanu, 37 healing, 46, 47, 49, 50, 51, 60, 78, 292, 295, 4089, 418 Hebrew (language), 53; inscriptions, 9, 17, 179, 219, 221, 222, 226, 258, 264, 270, 299, 305, 371 72, 394, 447, 44849, 450, 459, 471; names, terms, titles, 103, 137, 241, 260, 264, 418, 420, 426, 432, 434, 437, 470, 530, 601, 608; papyrus, 588; piyyut, 58485, 588, 627, 628 29; prayer, 139, 166, 305, 557, 565, 57172, 576, 626, 627; sermons, 627; Shema, recitation of, 208, 473, 502, 557; Torah reading, 159, 57879, 600, 626; women, 513 Hebrews, 34, 304, 626 Hebrews, synagogue of the, 105, 284, 285, 427, 430 Hebron, 39, 234 Hebron hills: synagogues, 222 Hecataeus of Abdera: Temple, 356; Torah reading, 27 Hekhal, 608 Hekhalot, 9, 17, 214, 239, 471, 528, 562, 57374, 588, 642; in piyyut, 584 R. elbo, 187, 398, 492 Helena of Adiabene, 500; gift to Temple, 56 Helios, 5, 122, 218, 219, 224, 230, 306, 307, 361, 389, 470, 471, 474, 475, 484, 580, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 6057, 608, 610, 611, 620, 642 Helladius, 68 Hellenes, Ptolemaic Egypt, 83 hellenization, 77, 99, 111, 129, 220, 222, 226, 227, 306, 308, 366, 447, 448, 450, 61314, 626, 627, 632, 635 Heracles, worship of, at communal meals, 142 Herod, xvi, 226 building activity, 35, 36, 53, 54, 284; Herodium, 46, 62, 63; Jerusalem Temple, 43,
776
subject index
hostel, 29, 58, 59, 144, 194, 276, 278, 318, 393, 406 house-church. See domus ecclesiae; private home house of prostration, 6465, 76 ukama, 190 uldah: preaching to women, 24 R. Huna, 188, 348, 441, 495 Hungary: inscriptions, 84, 252, 270, 297, 375; texts with pagan elements, 123 useifa basilical synagogue, 10, 353, 594; inscriptions, 385, 513; mosaics, 224, 362, 602; orientation, 327 Hutzal, 291 Hyllarima inscriptions, 302 hymns, 2, 3, 63, 65, 166, 244, 560, 574, 588, 589, 628, 629, 630 hyperetes, 419 hypogea, 283, 284, 623 Hyrcanus II, 114 Ibilin, 387 Iconium synagogue, 116 iconoclasm, 36468, 483 iconography, 15, 248, 256, 306, 593612 idolatry, 114, 184, 227, 229, 257, 295, 316, 326, 47071, 474, 478, 48081 Idumea, 306 Ignatius, 293, 573 Imperial edicts, 66, 81, 102, 127, 211, 239, 406, 423. See also Theodosian Code Diaspora Jewry, 132, 140, 169, 172; Asia Minor, 11314, 141; Delos, 106, 11213; Halicarnassus, 114, 140, 194; Sardis, 114 15, 130, 141, 194, 395 incantations, 17, 295, 408 incense shovel, 216, 217, 232, 233, 234, 235, 257, 306, 307, 362, 602, 608, 633 inglin, sanctity of, 368, 369, 370 inscriptions. See individual sites instruction, school, education, 5, 23, 25, 27, 75, 89, 104, 106, 128, 135, 14445, 146, 148, 152, 15557, 165, 172, 181, 287, 394, 398405, 410 11, 44245, 447, 468, 48990, 530, 586, 598, 630. See also study, communal; teacher instrumenta (holy objects), 280, 301 Intercisa (Hungary), 270, 297, 304, 425
Herod (continued ) 80, 95, 96, 186, 447; Masada, 6162; palaces, 226, 616 contribution to Antioch, 124 Herod Antipas: coins at Tiberias, 226; founder of polis, 53 Herodian era, 36, 69, 70, 324, 616; gural art, 226, 367 Herodians, 51 Herodians, synagogue of, 105 Herodium synagogue, 46, 62, 63, 71, 75, 76, 77, 94, 109, 169, 185, 333 ever ha-ir, 30, 545 Hezekiah, at city-gate, 30, 32 hieron, 23, 172 high priest, 27, 43, 56, 58, 95, 144, 146, 150, 151, 168, 225, 334, 344, 398, 420, 422, 437, 528, 540, 548, 586, 639 high priestess, 119 hipparchos, 514 Hippolytus, 560 R. isda, 188, 335 R. iyya bar Abba, 201, 398, 399, 400, 407, 458, 482, 488, 489, 490, 493, 495 R. iyya bar Ami, 477 holy congregation, 238, 246, 260, 385, 576 holy men, 24142, 404, 495 Homer, 218, 219, 220, 401, 620 homiletical material, 13, 24, 158, 177, 180, 580. See also midrash; sermon oni Haqatan, 167, 549 oni the Circlemaker, 495 Honorius, 423, 433, 461, 462 orvat Ammudim, 177, 183, 187, 193, 316, 32122, 323, 336, 347, 351, 353, 360, 361, 362, 387, 437, 447 orvat Anim, 177, 199, 215, 314, 324, 335, 337, 346, 354, 473, 522 orvat Etri, 74 orvat Kanaf, 315, 353 orvat Rimmon, 177, 187, 199, 211, 215, 316, 322, 358, 359 orvat Sumaqa, 177, 183, 199, 320, 327, 333 Hoshanah Rabbah, 377, 378 R. Hoshaya, 187, 383 hospitium, 406
subject index
intermediate days (of festivals), 440, 538 Ionian Jewry, 156, 266 Iranian inscriptions, 257, 372, 513 Iron Age city-gate, 3233 Isaac (biblical), 218, 220, 231, 244, 404, 497, 641 R. Isaac (third century), 95, 182, 246, 403, 477, 486, 490, 562, 581 R. Isaac b. R. Elazar, 476, 486, 489 R. Isaac Nappa, 421, 492 Isaiah (prophet, book of ), 49, 50, 149, 15354, 241, 254, 572 R. Ishmael, 539 R. Ishmael b. Elazar, 195, 198, 208 R. Ishmael b. R. Yose, 340 R. Isi, 364, 522 Isis, worship of, at communal meals, 142 Islam, 1, 211; and Judaism, 339, 366, 517, 518, 535, 589 Israelite Court, 2, 329, 504, 505 Israelites, and maamadot, 3839 Israelites on Delos, 110. See also Samaritans Italy, 82, 184 churches, 597 education, 400, 410, 443 Jewish catacombs, 105, 107, 28384 manumission of slaves, 122 synagogues, 84, 100, 1047, 127, 25051, 273 79, 28386; converted into church, 211; epigraphical and literary evidence, 84, 105, 106, 122, 127, 211, 25152, 270, 276, 278, 28385, 303, 417, 43132, 511; ocials, leaders, 25152, 278, 286, 303, 417, 43132, 511 Jacob (biblical motif ), 254, 385, 404, 406, 445, 497 R. Jacob b. Idi, 391 Jacob of Caesarea (archisynagogue), 448 Jacob of Kefar Nevoraya, 391, 486 Jacob of Pamphylia, 449 Jaa: azzan, 437; phrontistes, 435 Jairos (archisynagogue/archon), 418 Jason (high priest), 125 Jasons tomb, 603 Jehoshaphat (king of Judah), 32 Jeremiah: early sermons, 25; preaching, 24
777
R. Jeremiah, 318, 337, 368, 421, 467, 476, 489, 490, 537 Jericho, 46, 7274, 221, 316, 319, 324, 344, 355, 359, 522, 616, 632 basilical synagogue, 10; dating, 72; holy congregation, 238; inscriptions, 238, 372, 374, 385, 386, 447, 576; mosaic oors, 361, 367, 387, 471, 594; triclinium, 73, 74, 142 Jewish community, 414 Jerome, 292, 404, 405, 469, 481, 489, 582 Jerusalem, xv, xvi, 46, 5561, 7980, 98, 547; Agatharchides, 28, 165; Antiochus Epiphanes, 125; Arad-Khipa, 37; archisynagogue, 417, 42526, 448, 449; Christian city, 176, 242, 244, 245; churches, 115, 248, 631; city-gate, 31, 36, 42, 43; destruction, 80, 148, 17475, 192, 521, 559, 631; donations, individual, 38788; elders, 495; gural art, 224, 22526; rstfruits, funds to, 40, 105, 106, 115, 131, 141; Ginat Gate, 35; Hellenistic reforms of Jason, 125; high court, 93; inscriptions, 57, 371, 373, 424; Jewish settlement, 212; Jewish symbols, 307, 6023; Josiahs reforms, 24, 26, 32; liturgical traditions, 572, 630; miqveh, 72, 7576; monasteries, 243; names, 191; New Testament, 8, 5556, 57, 79, 126, 143; orientation to, 62, 93, 109, 128, 164, 19596, 198, 199, 204, 215 16, 222, 237, 247, 257, 269, 300, 313, 319, 323, 325, 32630, 335, 33839, 343, 34547, 349, 354, 355, 375, 376, 379, 433, 473, 532, 553, 631, 633, 634; in prayer, 163, 541, 549; presbyters, 448; priests, 438, 439, 441, 521, 522; priestess, 510; priestly blessing, 168; sanhedrin, 93; Torah, haftarah reading in, 26, 36, 40, 58, 153, 344, 421; Water Gate, 36. See also Aelia Capitolina Jerusalem synagogues, 61, 175, 247, 543; of Diaspora Jewry, 48, 5657, 58, 59, 60, 76, 79, 207, 449; evidence for, 46, 48, 72, 79, 185, 186, 206, 382, 387; and schools, 392; Sukkot, 476 77; Theodotos inscription, 8, 56, 5758, 59, 70, 104, 120, 138, 144, 194, 406, 42526, 432, 448, 449, 522 Jesus, 79, 117, 118, 243, 419, 619, 634; Galilee, 8, 4652, 118, 153, 157, 378, 400, 500; healing activity, 46, 47, 49, 51, 418; in liturgy, 559,
778
subject index
Jerusalem Temple and Mount, 36, 45, 56, 61, 79, 88, 95, 125, 141, 226, 233, 341, 356, 397, 404, 437, 441, 447, 452, 503, 504, 505, 51112, 602 Jewish-Samaritan conict, 38 pagans, pagan elements, 117, 123, 126 synagogue: 42, 46, 48, 5354, 71, 78, 79, 82, 128, 13536, 145, 148, 151, 156, 157, 158, 160, 163, 165, 252, 302, 334, 382, 384, 408, 469, 495, 504, 535, 543 Tiberias, 46, 5253, 93, 100, 102, 148, 165, 203, 391, 427 women, 126, 499, 501, 503, 504, 51112 R. Joshua (b. anania), 60, 348, 351, 392, 399, 418, 54447, 549, 563 Joshua (biblical), 254 Joshua (city prefect), 32 Joshua (son of Sapphias), 203 Joshua b. Gamla, 144, 398 R. Joshua b. anania, 60, 337, 392, 488 R. Joshua b. Levi, 240, 348, 353, 375, 406, 477, 491, 495, 512, 545, 563, 565, 566, 575 R. Joshua b. Qabusai, 114 R. Joshua b. Qora, 551 Josiah, Josianic era, 2, 31, 254; reforms, xv, 24, 25, 26, 32 Jubilees (book), 42, 334, 548 Jubilees (festival), 441 Judaean Desert, archaeological nds in: monasteries, 243; synagogues, 46, 6166 Judaean synagogues, xii, 2, 8, 28, 3637, 42, 44, 4580, 82, 94, 115, 127, 128, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 143, 146, 151, 152, 153, 155, 158, 159, 163, 164, 165, 16667, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 175, 177, 183, 193, 206, 246, 307, 333, 361, 378, 395, 473, 522, 531, 540, 54243, 591, 592, 616, 631; in southern Judaea, 197, 199, 205, 211, 212, 222, 230, 306, 314, 322, 324, 334, 335, 346, 358, 366, 371, 394, 473, 611, 619, 632 R. Judah (Babylonia, third century), 368, 369, 446, 495 R. Judah I (the Prince), xvi, 177, 181, 182, 183, 187, 320, 383, 404, 407, 436, 443, 456, 458, 473, 486, 490, 497, 536, 549, 553, 581, 582, 641 R. Judah II Nesiah, 399, 457, 485, 490 Judah b. Barzillai al-Barceloni, 585
Jesus (continued ) 560; memorial churches, 242; pater nostrum prayer, 590; and Pharisees, 40, 47, 51, 144; in piyyutim, 245; Prophets, reading from, 49, 50, 15354, 157, 158, 348, 378, 438, 582; Seat of Moses, 347; in synagogue, 7, 8, 46, 48 52, 143, 144, 153, 157, 347, 378, 400, 438, 500; teaching, preaching, 8, 46, 48, 49, 50, 51, 75, 143, 144, 158, 348, 378, 582 Jesus/Joshua (son of Sapphias), 148, 203 Jewish art: interpretation, study of, 10, 1112, 59399, 6027, 61012; programmatic, 60710 Jewish Christians, 124, 208, 209, 298, 308, 326, 419, 559, 567, 571, 619, 630; polemic, 596, 607, 610 Jewish Quarter ( Jerusalem), 226, 602 Jezreel Valley, 383 Joab, 31 Job, targum of, 160, 161 John: on Jesus, 46, 51; literary form, 151 John Chrysostom, 9, 78, 124, 126, 202, 235, 292, 29497, 298, 302, 394, 4089, 428, 469, 502, 505, 511, 517, 582 John Hyrcanus, 161, 226 R. Jonathan, 457, 577 Jonathan the Hasmonean, 147 Jordan, Byzantine mosaics, 352 Jordan River, 225, 327 Jordan Valley, synagogue remains, 183, 222, 250, 257, 447, 449; mosaics, 361 R. Joseph, 291 Josephus anti-Jewish incidents, 147, 148, 203 art and symbols, 224, 226, 227, 481, 601, 602, 604, 608 Caesarea, 46, 68, 147, 148 Diaspora: Asia Minor and Greece, 82, 113 15, 117, 130, 13941, 156, 318; Delos, 106, 111, 11213, 318; Egypt, 82, 83, 85, 88, 90, 91, 95, 100, 157, 285; Rome, 102, 106, 107, 148; Syria, 12427, 295 Dor, 46, 6668 Essenes, Qumran, 31, 63, 65, 169, 302, 475 Galilee, Galileans, 52, 93, 492 Imperial edicts, 102, 106, 11215, 127, 130, 132, 13940, 169, 194
subject index
R. Judah b. Bathyra, 421 R. Judah b. Ilai, 91, 95, 185, 194, 45556, 578 R. Judah b. Pazi, 317, 340, 495 Judah of Sidon (archisynagogue), 448 Judah the Galilean, 58 judaizers, 89, 502 R. Judan, 246, 570 R. Judan bar Ishmael, 349 judge, 31, 350, 383, 391, 395, 423, 436, 442, 470, 490 Julian, xvi, 298, 396; rebuilding of Temple, 176, 247, 519 Julia Severa, 8, 11920, 129, 132, 136, 137, 138, 374, 508, 509, 624 Julius Caesar, 107, 112, 113, 140, 144, 523 Jupiter, worship of, 122, 142 Justin I, 219 Justinian, 244; Novellae, 308, 434 Justin Martyr, 418, 419, 560 Justus of Tiberias, 52 Juvenal, 106, 285 Kabul, 458 Kafra, Kifra, synagogue of (near Tiberias), 207, 493, 528 kaltira, 368, 369, 370 Karaites, 202, 347, 357, 517, 589 kavanah, 546 Kefar Aqavia, 373 Kefar ananiah, 215, 238 Kefar Tavi, 391 Khan Khalde, 356 el-Khirbe, 190, 191, 216, 315, 322, 352 Khirbet e-Dikke, 316, 324, 353, 361 Khirbet Samara, 189, 190, 191, 216, 315, 322, 352 Khirbet Shema, 193, 196, 198, 237, 319, 320, 321, 379, 503 Khirbet Umm el-Umdan. See Modiin synagogue Khirbet Yitzaqia, 340, 387 Kissum: priestly courses, 239, 524 kitchen, in synagogue, 142, 275, 277, 292, 318, 394 koinon, 130, 173. See also associations Kokhav Hayarden, 336, 387 kuppah, 397. See also charity
779
Lachish city-gate, 33 Lactantius, 193 Lamentations (book), 393, 502 lamps, 295, 359, 388; Darom type, 205, 603; oil, 111, 112, 128, 275, 284, 358, 603, 623; suspended (candelabra), 359. See also ner tamid (eternal light) Latin, xii, 17, 276, 280, 281, 299, 300, 304, 305, 372, 431, 625, 643; names, 120, 129, 270, 271 Law of Moses. See Torah leadership, xii, 2, 27, 68, 174, 287, 468, 469, 531, 535, 547 church, 248, 350, 415, 431, 48182 priests, 2, 44, 59, 79, 137, 156, 303, 419, 517, 520, 521, 52324 Samaritan, 188 synagogue, 2, 5, 7, 8, 23, 93, 119, 120, 13233, 13638, 156, 157, 264, 278, 300, 3034, 332, 33940, 342, 350, 41253, 521, 523, 596, 635, 637; prayer leader, 204, 209, 237, 331, 346, 353, 376, 377, 378, 380, 384, 420, 44042, 475, 488, 491, 494, 526, 528, 545, 553, 554, 555, 556, 563, 568, 575, 617, 627, 634, 643 (see also shelia tzibbur) town, communal, 5, 30, 52, 67, 93, 104, 221, 25960, 304, 41315, 416, 42122, 426, 427, 429, 44246, 449, 453, 45465, 638, 642, 643 women, 2, 41415, 43132, 500, 506, 50911, 51315 lectern, 343, 345, 369, 370, 378 legis doctor, 304, 431 Leontis, 218, 319, 388, 620; mosaic oor, 218, 21920, 405, 620 Leontopolis: inscriptions on proseuche, temenos, 83; temples, 3, 83, 85, 96, 511 Leptis Magna, 251 Letter of Aristeas, 42, 90, 114, 146, 157 Levi (Babylonian), 290 R. Levi bar iyta, 473 Levi b. Sisi, 203, 383, 490 Levites, 31, 166, 33637; maamadot, 39, 200, 637; Torah reading ceremony, 52627 Leviticus, 537; study of, 401; targum, 160, 478; Torah reading, 150, 538 Libertines. See freedmen
780
subject index
makusha, sanctity of, 368, 369, 371 Malalas, 68, 124, 126, 184, 407 Malta: presbytera, 432, 510 R. Mana, 490 Manasseh (king): desecration of Temple, 25 Manetho, 28 Mantinea, 318, 387, 429, 431 mantle. See parokhet manumission, 29, 12122, 12324, 127, 129, 131, 133, 143, 169, 294, 372, 393, 396, 624, 625. See also freedmen Maon (Judaea), 177, 193, 199, 215, 230, 324, 334, 335, 358, 359, 447, 473, 522, 603 Maon (Nirim), 11, 207, 224, 316, 330, 334, 339, 355, 387, 391, 397, 409, 489, 582, 619, 620, 623 Maoz ayyim, 177, 187, 199, 211, 215, 217, 219, 224, 342, 346, 355, 367, 379 Maradata synagogue, 207, 391, 395, 407, 489 Marcus Agrippa, 102, 156 Marcus Aurelius, 272, 297 Marcus Tittius, 101, 102, 132, 136 Marisa: city-gate, 35 Mark: archisynagogue, 418, 428; Christian liturgy, 573; Cyrenean Jews in Jerusalem, 56; Jesus, 46, 4849, 50, 51, 418; Pharisees, 302; synagogue, 143 marketplace, 24, 30, 94, 366, 398, 404, 501 Mark the Deacon, 611 Marneion, 611 Martyrdom of Peter and Paul, 420 martyrium, 296 Masada, xvi; synagogue, 46, 6163, 71, 75, 76, 77, 94, 98, 109, 169, 172, 185, 324, 333, 337, 616 Mata Measiya, 287 mater synagoges, 271, 286, 414, 430, 43132, 446, 447, 452, 510, 625 mathetes sophon, 303 Matrona, synagogue of, 409 mats, 263, 33738, 379. See also seating arrangements; synagogue architecturebenches Mattathias Antigonus (coin), 602 R. Mattenah, 368 Matthew, 47, 198; archon, 428; charity, 144; Jesus, 46, 4849, 50, 51; Pharisees, 144, 168; prayer, 41, 168; Roman centurion, 51, 52; synagogue, 41, 46, 48, 143 R. Mattiah b. eresh, 303
library, 27; church, 405; synagogue, 3, 292; temples, 4045 Libya, Libyans, 57, 492 lintels. See synagogue architecture litterator, 421 liturgical poetry. See piyyut liturgies, exemption from, 97, 98, 423, 430, 433, 462, 463 location of synagogue, 2, 47, 69, 71, 73, 76, 100, 132, 258, 261, 265, 285, 286, 288, 297, 299, 305, 313, 31416, 389, 623 locus sanctus, 242, 248 Lod, Lydda, 18687, 202, 293, 383, 384, 391, 410, 414, 489 Luke: archisynagogue, 47, 137, 418, 428; archon of the synagogue, 418, 428; Cyrenean Jews in Jerusalem, 56; hyperetes, 438; Jerusalem synagogues, 79; Jesus, 8, 46, 47, 48, 4951, 52, 75, 118, 149, 15354, 15758, 348, 378, 408, 438, 582; prayer, 164; Prophetic reading, 48, 49, 149, 15354, 348, 378, 438, 582; Roman centurion, 5152, 110, 388; sermon, 15758, 348, 378, 582; synagogue, 1; synagogue, synagogue liturgy vs. Christianity, paganism, 116, 573, 590, 630; women, 501 lukhin, sanctity of, 368, 369, 370 lulav, 199, 235, 377, 438, 486, 554, 642; in synagogue art, 5, 216, 232, 233, 234, 257, 267, 275, 279, 306, 307, 342, 362, 602, 604, 608, 633 Lycia, 417 Lydda. See Lod, Lydda Lysimmachus, 68 maamadot: Judaea (sixth century), 25; Temple, 39; Torah-reading ceremony, 38, 537 Maccabean martyrs, 126, 296, 298 Macedonia, 117, 132, 250, 269, 270, 316, 459, 501 Madeba: church, 231; map, 367 maftir, 200, 239, 556, 578, 642 magic, 6, 17, 204, 295, 408, 409, 426, 471, 527, 601 magistrorum synagoge, 469 Magnesia, 428 Mago synagogue, 292, 431; converted into church, 298 main hall of synagogue. See synagogue architecture
subject index
Mauretania: pater synagoges, 429; rabbi, 303; synagogue converted into church, 211, 298 Maximus, 639 Mediterranean (eastern), 12, 115, 130, 214, 248, 293 Megiddo city-gate, 32, 33 Megillah, reading by women, 512 meitzah. See chancel screen; partitions; womens gallery R. Meir, 114, 201, 303, 305, 474, 487, 500, 501, 539, 547, 582 Meiron, 177, 183, 187, 193, 194, 261, 315, 319, 32021, 347, 353, 360, 389, 471, 616 mellarchon, 428 mellogrammateus, 435 Memphis, 104 R. Menaem b. Yose, 201, 377 Men of the Great Assembly: targumim, 161; Torah reading, 24 menorah, 5, 94, 148, 198, 2045, 21617, 230, 23132, 233, 234, 235, 236, 251, 254, 257, 258, 263, 266, 267, 269, 270, 272, 275, 279, 301, 307, 313, 321, 340, 342, 343, 346, 356, 35860, 362, 375, 376, 470, 484, 532, 623, 633; donated by Antoninus to synagogue, 136, 198, 359, 388; interpretation of, 3067, 360, 523, 599, 6024, 608 Merot, 177, 211, 215, 316, 322, 364; amulet, 409; biblical gures, 231, 362, 598; coins, 397; courtyard, 318, 331; inscriptions, 372, 453; location, 314, 315; menorah, 358; mosaics, 361; orientation, 196; platform, podium, 237, 345, 346, 347, 354; stepped cistern, 334; stone carvings, 224, 360, 361 Mesopotamian city-gate, 33 Messiah (biblical motif ), 254 meturgeman, 340, 384, 443, 445, 458, 472, 474, 488, 490, 492, 599, 642, 643 mezuzah, 502, 551 Middle Ages, 161, 211, 213, 390, 491, 496, 498, 503, 517, 572, 573, 578, 585, 586, 588, 642 midrash, 8, 176, 181, 214, 245, 579, 581, 583, 588; artistic midrash, 61011; and Dura frescoes, 256, 467, 59596, 599; gural art, 47980; Genizah, 356; instruction in synagogue or academy, 403, 436, 445; ner tamid, 241, 356; and piyyut, 561, 584, 629; priestly blessing,
781
375; Seat of Moses, 34748; study of, 13, 401; and synagogue, 53, 84, 180, 181, 194, 24041, 247, 28485, 288, 336, 356, 377, 384, 487, 488, 497, 546, 562, 627; and targum, 159, 401, 584; and Torah reading, 150, 152, 159, 353, 536, 565; women, 501, 512 Migdal (Magdala) synagogue, 46, 7172, 187, 207, 401, 445, 490 migdal (tiered chest), sanctity of, 369, 371 Milan, 410, 443 Miletus, 124, 251, 266, 294 Minah, 582, 590 minim (heretics), 488, 541 Minorca: bishop, Severus, 292; leader, 304, 431; Mago, 292, 298, 431; synagogue converted into church, 211, 298 minors: Torah reading, 501, 506 minyan (quorum), 31, 200, 446, 555, 565, 590 miqdash meat (lesser, diminished sanctuary), 4, 24, 25, 79, 206, 240, 357, 632, 640 miqveh (ritual bath, stepped cistern), 55, 63, 70, 72, 73, 74, 7576, 109, 114, 179, 189, 274, 276, 296, 302, 33335, 642 Miriam (biblical gure), 336, 516 missionary activity, 116, 560 Mithridates, 108, 122 mizoteros, 385, 448 Mnaseas of Patara, 28 moade el, 25 Modiin (Khirbet Umm el-Umdan) synagogue, 46, 48, 69, 70, 75, 94, 169, 183, 185 Moesia, 417, 425 Monobaz: gift to the Temple, 56 Monteverde, 283, 285, 300. See also catacombs Mopsuestia, 251 Moriah, Mt.: Abraham on, 205; as Temple Mount, 254, 300 mosaic oors. See individual sites Moses, 68, 316, 347, 348, 351, 404, 554, 639; biblical motif, 225, 236, 254, 255, 348; origin of Amidah, 377; origin of Torah reading, 24, 32, 116, 148, 149, 150, 156 mounts. See names of specic mounts mourning practices, 31, 331, 408, 437, 440, 458, 473, 569 Muhammad, 160 Mursa, 297
782
subject index
Naveh (Hauran): arona, 198, 208, 351; priests, 137 Nazareth: Jesus in synagogue, 4851, 75, 149, 153, 157, 378; priestly courses, 239, 524 Nebo, Mt., 247, 619 Nebuchadnezzar, at city-gate, 31 necropolis, 224, 278, 279, 392, 593 Nehardea, 89, 290, 291, 565 Nero, 103, 119 ner tamid (eternal light), 241, 35657, 375, 642 Nevoraya, 177, 183, 186, 187, 193, 198, 211, 215, 237, 321, 344, 353, 354, 357, 360, 366, 373, 379, 391, 486 New Jerusalem, 244 New Moon, 643; communal gatherings, 98, 101, 132, 141; communal meals, 493; in piyyut, 586; testifying, 229, 392, 478; visiting a prophet, 24; worship, 402, 440 New Year. See Rosh Hashanah Nicanor: gift to Temple, 56 niche, 33, 54, 72, 73, 108, 196, 197, 202, 215, 222, 237, 254, 257, 258, 259, 262, 266, 267, 279, 301, 305, 313, 319, 323, 325, 346, 352, 35556, 375, 379, 642 Nicolaus of Damascus, 148, 156 Nicopolis (Asia Minor), 193 Nilotic scene, mosaic in House of Leontis, 217, 620 Ninth of Av, 174, 239, 245, 393, 403, 568 Nisibis, 421 Nissim ibn Shahin of Qairuon, 126 Nitriai (Egypt) proseuche, 83, 87 Noah (biblical motif ), 230, 257, 258, 363, 372, 548 nomodidaskalos, 303 nomomathes, 303 nomophylakion, 265, 356 North Africa: archisynagogue, 417, 424; inscriptions, 12, 57, 96, 251, 508; leadership, 413, 432; mosaics, 98, 281, 622; synagogues, 82, 99, 211, 251, 279; temples, 405 Numidia, 192, 405 numismatic evidence, 69, 110, 119, 177, 191, 225, 226, 227, 233, 238, 272, 279, 292, 322, 356, 397, 480, 481, 602 Nuzi, legal documents from, 30 nymphaeum, 72, 229, 481, 642
Museum of the Diaspora, Tel Aviv, 615 Muslim, Muslims, 366, 367, 498; inuence, 339, 367, 517; literature, 333; poetry, 13, 585 Mussaf (Additional Amidah), 440, 545, 570; High Holiday liturgy, 548; and piyyut, 584; Sabbath and holidays, 200, 408, 564, 571, 642 Mussaf sacrice, 239, 550, 570 Myndos, 417, 424, 510, 515 mysticism, Jewish, 239, 348; rabbis and synagogue liturgy, 528; studies in, 17, 596 Naaran, 316, 319, 344, 632; basilical synagogue, 10; courtyard, 330; iconoclasm, 365, 366; inscriptions, 221, 385, 447, 513, 522, 576; mosaic (gural art and Jewish symbols), 221, 224, 231, 307, 358, 36162, 372, 593, 597, 598, 602; parnas, 447; priests, 137, 447; sanctity of, 238; water installation, 333; women, 513 Nabatean temples, 142; courtyards, 324, 616, 633; inscriptions, 318, 394 Nabonidus, 553 Nabratein. See Nevoraya R. Naman, 477, 489, 495 al-Nakawa, 441 nakoros, 85, 86 names: Egyptian, 103; Greek, 98, 102, 103, 104, 111, 120, 122, 129, 13233, 257, 260, 270, 271, 388, 437; Hebrew, 103, 260, 264, 270, 437; Jewish, 102, 313, 419, 437; Latin, 120, 129, 270, 271; Roman, 57, 98, 102, 103, 286 naos, 148, 244, 260, 642, 643. See also aedicula; Torahark, chest, shrine Narbatta, 68 Naro (ammam Lif ) archisynagogue, 281, 417, 508 synagogue, 251, 27981, 292, 299, 300, 301, 316, 319, 376; bima, 301, 328, 344, 345, 376; donations, 281, 508; mosaic, 27981, 299, 344, 36263, 424, 622; orientation, 327, 328, 345; seating, 339; triclinium, 387 narthex, 215, 219, 237, 325, 331, 336, 346, 374, 617, 642 Nash papyrus, 166, 551, 552 Nasi, 40, 391, 392, 45465, 582. See also Patriarch, Patriarchate Naucratis, 88, 140 nave. See synagogue architecture
subject index
oaths, 295, 409, 62324 odeum, in Caesarea, 68, 126, 184 Oenomus of Gadara, 400 Oescus, 417 oikos, 119, 128, 340 Olbia inscription, 120, 428, 624 Old Synagogue (Sarugnaia), 207 omphalos, 197, 244 Onias IV, 83, 85, 96 Ono, 429 Onqelos the Proselyte, 114 opus latericium, 277, 642 opus listatum, 622, 642 opus reticulatum, 277, 622, 642 opus sectile, 275, 642 opus vittatum, 277, 622, 642 Oral Law. See Mishnah orientation of synagogue, 3, 62, 164, 195, 196 97, 204, 206, 21516, 237, 300, 313, 314, 324, 32630, 345, 366, 379, 386, 465, 532, 617, 626, 631, 633, 634 Origen, 293, 295, 405 Orpheus (motif ), 254 orthostat, 361 Osijek (Hungary) inscription, 84 ossuaries, 603. See also burial; sarcophagi Ostia: cemetery, 278; gerousiarch, 278; guilds and collegia, 27778, 618; inscriptions, 278, 356, 417, 429; Jewish community, 278; pater, 278, 429, 430 Ostia synagogue complex, 11, 81, 128, 140, 144, 250, 252, 27378, 292, 299, 300, 316, 317, 318, 331, 340, 376, 387, 622; aedicula, 275, 276, 277, 301, 354; archisynagogue, 278, 297, 417; dating, 1045, 127, 274; excavations and studies, 16, 27374, 277; inscription, 8, 84, 128, 276, 297; Jewish symbols, 306; kitchen, 142, 277, 278, 292, 318, 394; mosaics, 275, 276, 36263; near sea, 105, 114, 128, 132, 274, 302, 305, 334; orientation, 128, 204, 300, 327, 328, 345; private dwelling, 27677; triclinium, 104, 276, 292, 394; water installations, 274, 276, 278, 302, 332 ownership of synagogue, 270, 287, 290, 45556, 459 Oxyrhynchus (Egypt), 588
783
pagan, pagans, 2, 12223, 209, 396, 397, 400, 410, 479, 497, 624, 625, 628; Asia Minor, 88, 119, 12223, 136, 374, 5089, 514; associations, societies, 293, 392; Caesarea, 68, 77; cities, 35, 44, 77, 114; communal meals, 14142, 624; Cyrene, 88, 102; decline of, 175, 18384, 192, 227, 483; deities, 85, 134, 147; Delos, 108, 109, 110, 111, 113, 128; Dor, 67, 77; Egypt, 27, 28, 84, 85, 88, 91, 300; and holiness, 77, 241 42; and Jewish practice, 88, 89, 91, 329; and Judaism, 11718, 501, 643; lamps, 111, 128, 359; leadership, 13738, 420, 42627, 429, 437, 438, 451, 514; orientation, 326, 329, 633; priests, 111, 350, 406, 420, 463, 524; public buildings, 108, 109, 320, 326; relationship with Jewish community, 5, 8, 67, 68, 113, 114, 125, 126, 133, 136, 147, 192, 374, 5089; and synagogue, 4, 8, 67, 85, 110, 118, 11920, 129, 13132, 135, 139, 184, 257, 263, 294, 5089, 624; Syria, 125, 126, 501, 622, 623; temples, sanctuaries, shrines, 2, 3, 27, 28, 46, 77, 91, 111, 120, 131, 133, 135, 137, 139, 140, 184, 195, 19798, 211, 216, 229, 249, 257, 263, 315, 326, 329, 338, 350, 390, 394, 403, 405, 406, 408, 410, 518, 531, 611, 615, 616, 618, 630, 631; water installations, 333; women, 11920, 374, 501, 505, 508, 509, 514, 515, 518; worship, 131, 151, 164, 166, 226, 326, 329, 470, 531, 545, 581, 62930, 631. See also donor, donation; pagan art, motifs; pagan literature pagan art, motifs, 15, 89, 111, 128, 218, 227, 229 30, 365, 470, 480, 481, 602, 605, 622, 623; vs. Jewish art and symbols, 307, 602, 619, 621, 639 pagan literature, 28, 418; on Jewish leaders and synagogues, 42223, 46970 paintings, wall, 14, 120, 147, 25556, 284, 364, 387, 470, 599, 622. See also frescoes palaestra (gymnasium), 26162, 618, 623 Palatine, 405 Palencia, 282 Palladius, 419 Palmyra, 251 Pamphylia: archisynagogue, 448, 449; inscriptions, 332; phrontistes, 343, 435 Panarion, 390, 460, 524 panegyriarch, 514 Panticapaeum: inscriptions, 123, 294, 297, 624; proseuche, 120
784 s u b j e c t i n d e x
R. Pappa, 477, 495, 566 papyrological evidence, 2, 8289; Jewish communal archive, 88; Jewish community, 107; piyyut, 588; prayer, 551, 552, 571; proseuche/eucheion, 42, 81, 83, 85, 86, 87, 88, 140, 166; Torah scrolls and pagan statues, 147, 151. See also Egyptian papyri Papyrus Egerton, 571 Papyrus Fouad, 151 parables, 487 parnas, 382, 414, 421, 441, 447, 460, 492, 495, 643 parokhet (curtain, mantle, kila), 216, 352, 643; sanctity of, 368, 369, 370 Parthian art, 622 partitions, 33, 262, 274, 276, 277, 34142, 407, 502, 503, 505, 517, 642, 643. See also chancel screen; womens gallery passageways, 33, 35, 68, 70, 316, 330, 331, 408 Passover, 344, 393, 637; Haggadah, 547; Hallel, 554, 591; prayer for dew, 586; sacrice (in Temple), 142, 547; seder ritual, 142, 547, 630; synagogue ritual, 296, 547; Torah reading, 150, 538 patella, 294, 397. See also soup kitchen pateressa, 431, 510 pater synagoges, 270, 271, 278, 286, 414, 425, 42931, 433, 435, 446, 447, 452, 625 Patriarch, Patriarchate, xii, 58, 373, 422, 45465, 469, 470, 481, 485, 495, 521; appointments, 391, 416, 419, 423, 455, 45758, 46061, 469, 470; authority, 176, 193, 227, 240, 32324, 383, 390, 423, 455, 457, 458, 461, 464, 469, 478, 638; Cilicia, 240, 383, 419; and communal institutions, 395, 45557, 490; decline and disappearance, 212, 454, 460, 465, 520; exemption from liturgies, 423, 433, 46163; instruction, 404; Palestine, 272, 395, 463; Stobi, 270, 272, 459, 464; and synagogue, 5, 272, 32324, 381, 390, 392, 419, 455, 45759, 46061, 462, 46365, 469, 638; taxes, money collection, 240, 39192, 416, 42324, 434, 46061, 462, 469; Tiberias, 45960, 493; and R. Yoanan, 49394. See also Nasi Patriarchs (biblical), 377, 404, 445; inscription, 372; origin of Amidah, 24, 546, 566 patronus, 304, 431 pattern books, 218, 230, 596, 619 Paul Cilicia, 56 ogging in synagogue, 143 holy places, 242 Jerusalem, 55, 126, 143 missionary activity, 7, 115, 116, 117; Antiochof-Pisidia, 17, 118, 153, 157, 418, 581; Berea, 116, 117; Corinth, 117, 418; Damascus Christians, 126; Diaspora synagogues, 127, 134, 501; Philippi, 117; Rome, 286, 420; sermons, 118, 153, 157, 158, 165, 418, 559, 582; Thessalonica, 117; women, 499, 500501 Paulinus of Nola, 597 paytan, 13, 239, 378, 384, 528, 584, 586, 587, 628, 634, 637, 643 Peraea, 45, 327 Per Ankh (place of instruction, Egypt), 27, 171 Perga, 149 Pergamum, 251, 357, 387, 531, 629 Pesher Habbakuk, 160 Peter (in Rome), 420 Petita, 582 Petra: communal meals, 142 Petronius, 67, 77, 435 Phanagoria inscription, 123, 124 Pharisees, 4041, 46667, 469, 492, 543, 601; blessings, 167; gural art, 226; avurot, 115, 141; and Jesus, 40, 47, 51, 144; prayer, 169, 542, 54950; purication, 302; Sanhedrin, 179; Seat of Moses, 347, 350; study, 11617; synagogue (Hasmonean era), 26, 27, 4041, 60, 144, 469. See also Bet Hillel; Bet Shammai Philadelphia (Lydia), 105, 293, 302; basin, 302, 33132, 387 Philip (emperor), 190, 523 Philip (Herods son), 226 Philip II of Macedonia, 269 Philippi, 117, 132; synagogue/proseuche, 11516, 316, 501 Philippopolis. See Plovdiv Philistines, 255, 353 Philo, 85, 8991, 158 Alexandria, 8, 42, 46, 48, 53, 67, 8991,
subject index
92, 96, 106, 125, 128, 137, 170; communal prayer, 16364; instruction, 8990, 104, 128, 137, 15556, 165; priests, 89, 104, 137, 156; Torah reading, 89, 148, 154, 155, 157 art, 314, 548, 601, 608; menorah, 604 Diaspora synagogue/proseuche pre-70, 7, 86, 252, 543, 630 Essenes: communal meals, 141; Sabbath worship, 6566, 133, 149, 15253, 167, 169, 170 exarchon, 304 Jewry: Alexandria, 93, 106, 159; pogroms of 38 c.e., 7, 90, 92, 136; Rome, 56, 1056, 107, 132, 285 Rome, 89, 1056, 285 Therapeutae, 89, 142, 153, 15758, 169, 501, 503, 543 women, 499, 501, 503, 504 Philo of Byblos, 68 Phocaea, 119, 292, 340, 387, 388, 505, 508, 514 Phoenicia, 221, 328, 417 phrontistes, 343, 414, 424, 425, 430, 433, 435, 446, 448, 452, 625 Phrygia, 119, 417 phylacteries. See tellin pilasters. See synagogue architecture pilgrims, pilgrimage: Holy Land, 234, 242, 243 44, 400; Jerusalem, 43, 56, 57, 58, 76, 79, 144, 208, 235, 242 R. Pinas, 239, 486 Pinas the priest of Kafra (paytan), 528 Piraeus, 268 Pirqoi ben Baboi, 568, 572, 585, 588 piyyut, 2, 3, 222, 378, 58388, 643, 644; antiChristian, 24546; Aramaic, 245, 587, 627; Byzantine Palestine, 9, 13, 213, 496, 525, 562, 56970, 583, 585, 586, 627; development, 532 33, 58485, 592, 62829; Genizah, 570; and azzan, 441, 585; Hebrew, 62829; and liturgy, 375, 380, 441, 491, 496, 530, 53233, 562, 570, 58387, 588, 592, 599, 610, 628, 629, 640; origin of, 13, 21314, 584; and persecutions, 58485; post-70, 5; and prayer, 239, 496, 570, 573, 575, 584, 585, 58687; and priests, 520, 528, 562, 587; priestly courses, 239, 525, 586; and Qedushah, 573, 575, 584, 585; and
785
rabbis, 496, 562; study of, 13, 585; substitute for prayer and study, 378, 441, 585; and Temple, 525, 528, 587, 588; themes, 58687, 599, 610, 629; triennial division, 152; Yotzerot and Qerovot, 573, 584, 643, 644 plaza. See town/city square, plaza Pliny the Younger, 410 Plovdiv (Philippopolis) synagogue, 250, 252, 26970, 292, 297, 300, 301, 315, 316, 358, 363 Plutarch, 101, 333 podium, platform, 33, 65, 94, 95, 193, 213, 237, 263, 275, 276, 315, 319, 34347, 352, 353, 354, 370, 37576, 377, 379, 380, 387, 509, 581, 641. See also synagogue architecturebima poet, liturgical. See paytan pogroms of 38 b.c. (Egypt), 8, 90 polis, 641, 643; Cyrene, 102; Tiberias, 53 politeuma, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 127, 129, 130, 131, 133, 286, 643. See also associations Pompeii, 98 Pompeius Trogus, 68 Pompey, xv, 57, 113, 125, 437 Pope Gregory the Great, 211, 598 Porphyry, 192 Porta Capena, 285 portal. See synagogue architecturedoors, doorways portico. See synagogue architecture Porto, 435 pottery, ceramics, 71, 177, 266, 357, 359 praepositi sapientissimi, 469 prayer, 2, 3, 6, 23, 179, 180, 302, 477, 57077, 591, 606, 641, 643, 644; archaeology, architecture, 33536, 340, 379, 453, 532, 57677; Babylonia, 287, 289, 291, 563, 56769, 570, 572, 58889, 591, 592; biblical models, 24, 316, 546, 553, 566, 571; Byzantine period, 380; Christian, 29596, 545, 55961, 571, 573, 630, 644; communal, public, 29, 6465, 146, 162 69, 170, 171, 172, 204, 241, 330, 378, 43941, 47678, 486, 530, 531, 532, 54042, 543, 546 47, 550, 55354, 556, 570, 585, 590, 629, 631; communal vs. individual, 41, 168, 453; daily, 61, 64, 65, 209, 493, 496, 546, 549, 551, 563, 570; Diaspora, 131, 16466, 170, 171, 172, 204, 241, 302, 305, 57071, 588, 626; early syna-
786
subject index
Dura Europos, 137, 433, 523; exemption from liturgies, 423, 430, 463, 524; rst-century c.e., 137; and azzan, 438; instruction, 89, 137, 156; John Chrysostom, 294, 298; maamadot, 3839; miqveh, 73; pagan, 11, 131, 350, 403, 405, 406, 420, 463, 517, 628; paytanim, piyyut, 239, 528, 562, 584, 587; and Per Ankh, 27; prayer and study, 64, 167, 398; Qumran, 64, 137; Samaritan, 188, 189; Sardis, 265, 303, 376, 523; synagogue, 2, 44, 79, 137, 393, 407, 425, 430, 461, 469, 502, 520, 521, 52324, 52829, 637; synagogue ritual, 199, 375, 380, 475, 521, 524 27, 542, 543, 550, 552; targum, 161; Temple, 31, 39, 40, 43, 61, 79, 95, 136, 150, 167, 168, 169, 205, 234, 239, 307, 329, 438, 441, 504, 519, 542, 592; Theodotos inscription, 5859, 149, 523; women, 517 priestess, 119, 509, 510, 514 priestly blessing, 167, 168, 209, 375, 378, 407, 439, 502, 526, 527, 554, 555, 556, 557, 565, 568, 634; quorum of ten males, 527, 555, 590 priestly courses, 137, 152, 239, 372, 521; inscriptions, 520, 525, 587; piyyut, 239, 528, 58687 Priests Court, 43, 61 principales, 425 private home: prayer in, 180; synagogue in, 108, 129, 185, 299, 31819, 405, 618, 620; guild meeting in, 277. See also domus ecclesiae privilegia, 8 Procopius, 302 procurator, 66, 68, 479, 624 prohedria, 505 pronaos, 62, 318, 616, 643 pronomenos/pronoetes, 448, 460 prophetic reading. See haftarah reading Prophets (books of ), 11, 27, 49, 50, 117, 118, 146, 149, 150, 15355, 158, 160, 161, 201, 202, 296, 384, 402, 404, 438, 439, 448, 526, 556, 569, 577, 578, 582, 642 prophets: origin of Amidah, 24; at city-gate, 3032; listening to, visiting, 23, 24, 25; Torah reading (early), 24 propylaeum. See synagogue architecture proselytes, 29394, 374, 431, 549 proseuche (prayer house), 12, 23, 27, 29, 44, 8587, 14546, 172, 314, 643
prayer (continued ) gogue, 29; First Temple, 24; formalization, 16263, 167, 169, 49394, 531, 53334, 539 42, 55054, 555, 56265, 570, 571, 58891, 631; Greco-Roman, 165, 338, 629, 630; individual, 180, 242, 533, 541, 542, 545, 54647, 556, 564, 570, 629; inscriptions, 374, 386, 293; kavanah, 54647; language, 208, 305, 557, 62627; medieval, 359, 572; mysticism, 17, 528, 571, 57374; obligatory, 162, 180, 378, 493, 541, 543, 546, 548, 550, 555, 557, 565, 566, 570; pater nostrum, 590; piyyut, 378, 441, 570, 573, 58485, 588, 628; pre-70, 16263, 168, 378, 531, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 546, 570; Qumran, 6365, 137, 166, 167, 169, 543, 552, 559, 572, 575, 592; quorum, 446, 477, 55556, 565, 590 (see also minyan); and rabbis, 49396, 539 40, 55859, 563, 571, 57576; Samaritan, 189, 190, 563; in schools, 402; Second Temple, 28, 61, 6869, 546, 548, 552; sectarians, 169, 209, 547, 571, 572, 575, 592; study (modern) of, 10 12, 13; substitute for Temple sacrices, 26, 79, 133, 166, 167, 200, 24041, 247, 546, 561, 566, 570, 629; synagogue vs. bet midrash, 47678, 5012, 566; washing before, 33133; women, 5012, 505; Yavneh, 16263, 534, 536, 54049. See also orientation prayer hall. See synagogue architecturemain hall prayer leader. See shelia tzibbur, prayer leader prayer room, 72, 215, 217, 220, 405, 503 preacher, preaching, 8, 2425, 46, 49, 50, 71, 75, 116, 126, 149, 156, 15758, 165, 211, 237, 265, 290, 348, 350, 376, 378, 383, 384, 391, 436, 443, 476, 487, 48889, 490, 556, 560, 578, 58183, 586, 617 presbyter, 58, 251, 260, 349, 384, 414, 425, 432 34, 437, 446, 447, 451, 523, 524; Christian, 422 presbytera, 432, 51011 presbyterium, 617, 634 Priene synagogue, 250, 252, 26667, 297, 299, 301, 302, 305, 316, 327, 331, 332, 355, 618 priest, priests, xii, 315, 419, 447, 51929, 574; Abusin el-Meleq archives, 88; church, 244, 639; donors, 1034, 137, 364, 445, 52223;
subject index
Diaspora, 21, 53, 65, 81, 85, 127, 128, 138, 139, 16466, 17071, 543, 629, 631; Black Sea region, 1, 12122, 138, 143, 164, 418, 624; Delos, 1, 10911, 114, 129, 418; Egypt, 1, 8, 21, 22, 27, 29, 42, 44, 78, 81, 83, 85, 86 91, 114, 129, 133, 138, 139, 140, 141, 148, 164, 166, 170, 171, 300, 394, 623; Elche, 283; Gorgippia, 12223; Halicarnassus, 114; Olbia, 624; Panticapaeum, 120, 12324, 297; Philippi, 115, 117, 316, 501; Rome, 106; Sardis, 395 Palestine: Tiberias, 8, 5254, 75, 93, 138, 139, 165, 391 Septuagint, 139 prostates, 286, 414, 625 prostration, 6465, 76, 205, 206, 471, 482, 565, 580 Provincia Arabia, 250, 292, 418, 481 proxenia, 509 Prudentius, 597 prytanis, 514 psalmodos, 512 psalms, 43, 63, 146, 200, 239, 565, 570, 576, 589, 591, 630 psalm singer, 304, 588 pseudepigrapha, 38 Ptolemy III Euergetes, 83, 86 Ptolemy VI Philometor, 83, 85 Ptolemy VIII, 83, 86 Ptolemy Chennus, 68 Ptolemy Philadelphus: Septuagint, 146 purication, purity, xvi, 41, 59, 68, 76, 114, 150, 153, 227, 240, 302, 305, 333, 334, 407, 514, 517; Samaritans, 189, 315, 334. See also miqveh Purim, 512, 537, 564, 589, 591, 637 Qaddish, 408, 440, 527, 557, 58991, 627, 643; geulah prayer, 591; quorum, 590; and study, 590 qahal, 23, 139 Qana, 251 Qatzion, 84 Qatzrin, 54, 177, 193, 203, 317, 354, 379, 394, 471 Qedushah, 440, 494, 534, 568, 57176, 584, 585, 643; in Hekhalot literature, 57374; origin, 572, 573; Qedushah de-Sidra, 572; Qedushah of
787
the Creator, 57172, 574, 575; Qedushah while standing, 572 qerovah, 584 Qiddush, 406, 564, 643 Qillir. See Eliezer, Elazar Ha-Qallir Qiryat Sefer synagogue, 46, 48, 69, 75, 76, 94, 169, 183, 185, 333 Quartodecimans, 559 Quintilian, 4023, 444 Qumran: communal meals, 66, 115, 14142; communal worship, liturgy, 3, 6366, 76, 152, 166, 167, 169, 543, 559, 572, 575, 592; Essenes, 63, 6566, 115, 141, 152, 158, 169, 575; house of prostration, 18, 46, 167; Jewish norms, 146; Judaism and Christianity, 14; miqveh, 75; priests, 64, 137, 542, 543; quorum, 31 (see also minyan); scrolls, 63, 76, 167, 535, 559; study, 152, 156; targumim, 13, 16062, 474; tellin, 552 Rabba, 495 Rabban Gamaliel the Elder, 160 Rabban Gamaliel II of Yavneh, xvi, 114, 160, 227, 229, 421, 422, 458, 478, 480, 481, 483, 521; obligatory prayer liturgy, 536, 541, 543, 544, 545, 546, 566; standardization of Amidah, 11, 162, 54048 Rabban Gamaliel III, 478 Rabban Gamaliel VI, 462 Rabbanites, 357 Rabbat Moab: house of the Sabbath, 115, 299 Rabbula (bishop of Edessa), 252, 298 Rabina, 491 Rad, 361 rainmakers, 495 Rama, 336, 361, 387 Rami bar Abba, 491 Rashi, 209, 343, 353, 475 Rav, 290, 476, 482, 495, 563, 564 Rava, 350, 382, 407, 444, 495 Rav Ashi, 287, 491 Ravenna: Christian art, 352; church mosaics, 352, 597; Church of St. Apollonia, 352; synagogue converted into church, 211 Ravina, 291 Razis, 429
788
subject index
Rosh Hashanah, 39, 167, 179, 199, 23435, 296, 419, 428, 441, 537, 538, 548, 549, 554, 555, 637, 643 Rosh odesh. See New Moon rosh knesset, 420, 42122, 425, 437, 441; as archisynagogue, 137, 418, 426, 450, 453; and priests, 43, 420; Torah reading, 43, 137, 42021 Saadiah Gaon, 572, 589, 592 sabbateion, 23, 115, 117, 128, 141 Sabbath, 41, 337, 376, 406, 421; boundary, 315; charity, 59, 144, 396; Christians, 29596; communal meals, 52; edicts regarding, 114 15, 130; Jesus in synagogues, 47, 49, 50, 60, 75, 149; meetings, gatherings, 23, 52, 54, 75, 89, 90, 98, 102, 106, 11617, 128, 132, 137, 141, 150, 152, 39192, 501, 503, 506, 509; miracle work, 47, 51, 418; Qumran (Essenes), 6566, 149, 152, 156, 572; ritual, liturgical practices, 57, 5960, 118, 146, 150, 153, 199, 200, 352, 353, 408, 530, 542, 549, 550, 554, 556, 561, 563, 564, 56869, 571, 572, 57374, 582, 584, 585, 586, 642, 643; sermons, 150, 157, 391, 487, 488, 581, 582; study, instruction, 6566, 90, 104, 105, 106, 144, 148, 15253, 155, 156, 157, 165, 403, 405; and Temple, 39, 44142, 525; Torah reading, 8, 11, 6566, 116, 146, 149, 150, 152, 154, 165, 392, 492, 501, 53637, 538, 539, 564, 569, 642; visiting a prophet, 24; worship, 28, 66, 75, 11617, 14546, 148, 152, 157, 167, 573 sacramentum, 469, 553 sacred space, 17, 133, 204, 302, 342, 618, 643. See also sanctity sacrices, 68, 115, 131, 204, 401, 54445, 546, 561, 566, 570, 608; Jerusalem Temple, 2, 60, 76, 79, 142, 167, 200, 23941, 244, 247, 356, 375, 401, 484, 505, 526, 530, 546, 547, 550, 566; pagan temples, 133, 18384, 518, 535; Sardis, 141; Sepphoris synagogue, 241, 608; Tabernacle, 607 Sadducees, 40, 226; Temple, 40 Safed, 183, 361 safra, 490 Salamis, 116, 424 Salerno, 303
Reggio di Calabria, 105, 279, 425 Reov, 177, 215, 216, 219, 220, 230, 237, 248, 306, 319, 342, 346, 354, 359, 361, 364, 367, 37374, 386, 389, 471; priestly courses, 239, 524 reov ha-ir, 30 reliefs (stone), 222, 225, 267, 363, 615, 622 religio, 299 religio illicita, 185 religionum loca, 238, 302, 406 repository, proseuche/synagogue as, 90, 115 Resh Laqish, 229, 391, 436, 443, 458, 479, 481, 490, 582 residence, synagogue as, 276, 288, 343, 4056, 504 Restoration period, xv; origin of synagogue, 22, 25 revetments, wall (skoutlosis), 263, 299, 363, 364, 387, 623, 643 Revolt, First Jewish (6667 c.e.), xvi, 63, 126, 333, 521 revua, 31718, 394 rhetor, 157, 421, 581, 600 Rhodes, 149, 284, 432 Rishonim, 458 Roman synagogues, 14, 22, 47, 84, 1057, 128, 136, 206, 207, 28386, 293, 414; communal institution, 106, 252; destruction, 211; Jewish art, 235, 307, 352, 358, 597, 612, 623; leadership titles, 251, 286, 303, 304, 414, 415, 416, 417, 420, 425, 427, 428, 429, 43032, 434, 435, 510, 515, 523, 588; library, 292, 405; proseuche, 106, 138, 293; synagoge, 106, 165, 293; Theodotos inscription, 5657, 58, 59, 432, 449; Torah study and rabbis, 466 Romanus, 628 Rome, xvi, 99, 274; basilicas, 92; Bosphorus, vassal kingdom of, 121; catacombs (Jewish), 8, 12, 84, 94, 105, 111, 127, 179, 183, 235, 251, 28386, 300, 301, 303, 307, 352, 358, 414, 427, 434, 515, 594; dekany, 294; delegations to, 11213, 134, 147; freedmen, 56; Jewish community, 89, 90, 94, 106, 112, 28586, 297, 373, 414; Jews in Jerusalem, 59; literary evidence, 1057, 127; school in, 303; triumphal procession (70 c.e.), 148; workshops (mosaics), 230, 623 rosettes, 109, 279
subject index
Salome, 499, 500, 516 Salonika, 270 Samaria, Samaria-Sebaste, 45, 110; Agrippa I, 67; gate, 32, 35; synagogues, 192 Samaritans, 38, 589; art, 216; Chronicles, 188, 334; controversy with Jews, 38, 64, 85, 110, 191; Delos, 110 (see also Israelites on Delos); inscriptions, 110, 111, 21516, 219, 328; leadership, 93, 188, 350, 422, 524; liturgy, 563, 629; proseuche, synagogues, 100, 11011, 126, 18891, 192, 21516, 315, 322, 328, 350, 352; ritual bath (miqveh), 334; Sabbath scriptural readings and study, 64, 153; women, 502 Sambathic association, 88, 140 Samuel (Babylonian sage), 290, 368, 369, 495, 56364 Samuel (biblical gure), 254, 356 R. Samuel (Palestinian sage), 392, 403, 482 R. Samuel b. R. Isaac, 206, 474, 490, 492 R. Samuel b. R. Naman, 489, 577 Samuel bar Yedayah (priest and archon, Dura Europos), 137, 349, 433, 523 Sanctication of the Day, 549 sanctity, 246, 578; in Christianity, 243, 245, 631 32; churches, 244, 24748; Jerusalem, 195, 24344; paganism, 147; Seat of Moses, 351; and symbolism, 307, 632; synagogue/proseuche, 3, 44, 77, 78, 8586, 91, 13334, 139, 164, 166, 170, 17172, 187, 200203, 204, 206, 233, 238, 240, 245, 291, 302, 357, 36871, 380, 63032, 638, 640; Temple, xi, 78, 106, 200, 233, 245, 357, 631; Torah, Torah shrine, 14647, 148, 203, 236, 302, 351, 368, 370, 371; town square, 201 sanctuary, 4, 23, 25, 79, 133, 157, 199, 200, 204, 206, 229, 238, 240, 253, 262, 263, 264, 274, 277, 278, 27980, 292, 299, 316, 330, 331, 333, 335, 336, 340, 341, 355, 356, 357, 359, 375, 486, 489, 503, 639, 640. See also synagogue architecturemain hall sanctus, 560, 573 sanhedrin: Jerusalem, 93, 179, 463 Sarah (biblical motif ), 231, 608 sarcophagi, 99, 284, 597, 623 Sardinia: synagogue destruction, 211 Sardis: adjudication, 395; edicts, 113, 114, 130, 141, 194, 395; Jewish community, 141, 262,
789
266, 285, 297, 384, 389, 612, 618, 623, 624; Judaism, 265, 298 Sardis synagogue, 6, 11, 53, 92, 93, 94, 96, 120, 131, 191, 250, 26066, 267, 299, 308, 315, 611, 618; aediculae, 263, 264, 301, 354, 379; atrium, 261, 263, 264, 292, 316, 330, 331, 332; basilica, 262, 618, 623; chancel screen, 263; communal meals, 318; donors, 264, 37475; eagle table, 94, 263, 265, 266, 299, 343, 379, 623; entrances, portals, 262, 263, 264, 274; excavations, 15, 92, 252, 260, 263; frescoes, 363; functions, 262; inscriptions, 17, 263, 26466, 285, 303, 331, 356, 624; Jewish symbols, 306; menorot, 266, 35859, 603; mosaics, 258, 263, 264, 265, 299, 36263, 594, 611, 623; nave, 263, 299, 363, 376, 379, 623; orientation, 327; palaestra, 26162, 618, 623; priest, 137, 303, 376, 523; seating, benches, 93, 263, 264, 266, 337, 339, 342; size, 11, 53, 260, 261, 274, 285, 305, 316, 319, 618; sophodidaskalos, 265, 303, 376, 523; stone carvings, 263, 266, 299, 363, 594, 623; Torah shrine, 263, 265, 353, 356; water installations, 263, 302, 33132 Saringit (Sarongaia, Sarongin) synagogue, 336 Savion of Achziv (rosh knesset), 421 Schedia proseuche, 87 scribe, 23, 32, 40, 42, 51, 143, 286, 347, 390, 398, 418, 434, 436, 443, 511, 522, 643. See also grammateus; sofer scriptural readings. See haftarah reading; Torahreading seals: gural art, 225, 226, 478; menorah, 603 Sea of Galilee, 33, 246, 336, 342, 361 Seat, Cathedra, of Moses, 1112, 87, 109, 340, 346, 34751, 376, 642 seating arrangements Alexandria, 9192, 93, 94, 95, 433 Elche, 428, 433 Halicarnassus: amphitheater, 100 mixed/separate, of men and women, 500, 5025, 51112, 51617 Rome: theaters and amphitheaters, 95 Sardis, 93, 94, 263 synagogue, 326, 33740, 379, 473; elders, 93, 433; Patriarch, 33839, 45859, 473 Sebaste, See Samaria, Samaria-Sebaste sebomenoi, 118, 140, 643
790 s u b j e c t i n d e x
Secenians, synagogue of, 434 Second Commandment, 224, 366, 479, 481 sects, sectarians, sectarianism, 6365, 90, 117, 14142, 152, 155, 156, 157, 158, 160, 167, 169, 175, 180, 182, 209, 215, 302, 326, 398, 419, 423, 462, 467, 475, 502, 503, 514, 518, 535, 547, 549, 553, 571, 572, 57576, 592, 637 sedarim, 536 Sefer Harazim, 295, 471, 601, 605, 606 Sefer Yetzirah, 608 Seleucid: era, 124, 260, 373; kings, xv, 125, 136 Seleucus I, 125 Seneca, 333 Sennabris, 490 Sennacherib, 32 separation of men and women: pagan and Christian settings, 505, 516, 517; synagogue, 5025, 511, 517; Therapeutae sanctuary, 157, 503, 504, 517 Sepphoris, 177, 398; Babylonian synagogue, 207, 400, 404, 437, 486; bet midrash, 337; coins, 238, 481; comes, 448; Great Synagogue, 207, 488; ever ha-ir, 545; Jewish community, 373, 388, 410, 413, 612; R. Judah I (Patriarch), 404, 407, 460, 486; number of synagogues, 187, 206, 207, 293; priests, 520, 521, 523, 528; R. Yoanan, 48889, 545 Sepphoris synagogue, 11, 337, 366, 476; Aqedah scene, 362, 602; archisynagogue, 417, 425, 448, 449; artistic motifs, 22021, 328, 599, 608; biblical gures and scenes, 5, 231, 389, 598, 608, 610, 611, 633; inscriptions, 179, 220 21, 388, 425, 448, 449, 508, 513, 523, 608, 610, 632; Jewish symbols, 532, 597, 608, 633; lighting, 359; mosaics, 22021, 241, 246, 361, 387, 528, 594, 596, 6089, 622; orientation, 199, 216, 328, 329; sun god and zodiac, 5, 224, 225, 36162, 372, 389, 596, 598, 600, 602, 606, 608, 610, 611, 632; Temple-Tabernacle, 5, 205, 241, 362, 372, 602, 608; Torah shrine, 358, 610, 633 Septimius Severus, 84, 183, 297, 405 Septuagint synagogue: community, congregation, 23, 42, 139; Susannah, 41, 143 and targumim, 159, 160 theos hypsistos, 85 Torah reading, 49, 90, 151 translation into Greek, 139, 151, 159, 304, 626 Serapis, worship of, 142, 422; sacred archives, 405 sermon (derashah), homily, 15758, 559, 599; church, 211, 586; Deuteronomy, 25; fast days, 495; and haftarah reading, 348, 582; Jesus, 4951, 154, 157, 158, 348, 582; John Chrysostom, 29495, 298, 582; language, 627; Late Antiquity, 6, 588, 628; pagan, 630; Paul, 152, 157, 158, 581, 582; Petita, 582; Sabbath and holidays, 157, 391, 488, 581; sanctus, 560; Second Temple period, 5, 164, 491, 560; synagogue, 2, 3, 158, 343, 344, 350, 37576, 380, 391, 486, 487, 488, 491, 493, 501, 562, 581, 582, 634, 640; synagogue vs. bet midrash, 222, 398; Tanuma-Yelamdenu, 583; and Torah reading, 146, 152, 157, 158, 165, 569, 577, 58083, 586; women, 487, 501, 505 seven good men of the town, 291 Severan dynasty, 183 Severus: and Patriarch, 373, 45960; synagogues in Rome, 84, 28485; synagogues in Tiberias, 220 Severus (bishop of Minorca), 292, 431 Sevrianos Aphros from Tyre (archisynagogue), 448 Shabbat Parah, 150 Shabbat Sheqalim, 150, 564 Shaf ve-Yativ, 290, 291 shamash, 384, 415, 445 Shavuot (Pentecost), 344, 537, 538, 554, 588 e-Shazrak, 388 Shekhinah, 189, 198; academies, schools, 246, 400, 404, 477; synagogue, 198, 246, 291, 404, 477; Temple, 197 shelia tzibbur, prayer leader, 204, 209, 237, 331, 346, 353, 376, 377, 378, 380, 384, 440, 475, 488, 494, 526, 528, 545, 553, 554, 555, 556, 563, 568, 575, 617, 634, 643. See also leadership Shellal (church), 230, 619, 621 Shema, 445, 476, 55054, 565, 643; and Amidah, 180, 526, 542, 555, 556, 56566, 573, 589, 591; biblical passages, 167, 550, 551; blessings, 167, 493, 531, 548, 550, 552, 556, 562, 563, 566, 567, 569, 57475; Hellenistic patterns, 630; language, 208, 473, 557, 563, 627, 632;
subject index
minyan, 555, 590; Nash papyrus, 166, 551, 552; and piyyut, 573, 584, 585, 644; priests, 542, 550; and Qedushah, 57173; reciting antiphonally, 55354; scribes, 542; standing, 553, 567, 591; themes, 55152, 553; women, 502 Shemini Atzeret, 586 Shemoneh Esreh. See Amidah Shephelah, 643; priestly courses, 524; synagogues, 46, 6970, 177, 206, 222, 327 Sherira Gaon of Pumbeditha, 25, 289 Shiloh, 356 Shimon Megas, 528 shivata, 584, 643 R. Shmuel bar R. Yitzaq, 340 Shmuel Haqatan, 495, 547 shofar, 5, 199, 205, 216, 217, 232, 233, 234, 235, 251, 257, 267, 275, 306, 307, 342, 362, 439, 441, 548, 554, 604, 608, 633, 643 Siburesians, synagogue of, 284, 285, 427, 434 Sicarii, 46, 58; Masada, 62 Sicily, 635; presbyter, 432; synagogue destruction, 211 siddur, siddurim, 592, 643 Sid: ambon, 343; archisynagogue, 417; columns, 34041, 343; fountain, 302, 332, 387; inscriptions, 302, 332, 340, 343, 359, 38687, 417, 437; menorot, 340, 343, 359; pavement, 387; phrontistes, 343; presbyter, 437; simma, 343; synagogue ocials, 437 Sidon, Sidonians, 50; archisynagogue, 417, 448; Jewish community and synagogue in Sepphoris, 207, 328, 373 sidra (place of study, synagogue), 577 Sikhni (Sikhnin), 205, 206, 207 R. Simeon b. Elazar, 59, 537 R. Simeon b. Gamaliel II, 59, 287, 392, 456, 457, 474, 482 R. Simeon b. Laqish, 187, 383 R. Simeon b. Netanel, 545 Simeon b. Shata, 144, 398 R. Simeon b. Yoai, 399, 400, 443, 477, 480, 551 R. Simeon bar Megas, 239 Simeon Hapaquli: origin of Amidah, 24, 540 41, 543, 544 R. Simeon of Tarbanat, 474, 492 Simat Torah, 152, 536, 637 simma, 343
791
Simonias, 383, 436, 442, 443, 458, 490 Simonides (Theodotos inscription), 58, 59 Simon the Maccabee, 42 Sinai, Mt.: biblical motif, 254, 348, 539 skoutlosis. See revetments, wall Smyrna: archisynagogos/archisynagogissa, 417, 510, 515; mosaic oors, 387; pater, 58, 429; presbyter, 58 sodalitates, 136 sofer, 383, 434, 442, 443, 445, 451, 512, 522, 643 solea, 379, 634 Song of Moses, 200 Song of the Sea, 55354 Songs of the Sabbath Sacrice scroll, 572 Sons of Bathyra, 199 sophodidaskalos, 265, 303, 376, 512, 523 sophos, 303 Sosthenes (archisynagogue in Corinth), 418 soup kitchen, 294, 374, 397. See also patella; tamui Spain: mosaic oor, 28283; inscriptions, 282 83; synagogue, 211, 250, 28183 Sparta, 147 Spondil, spondill, 297, 304, 375 stadium, 100, 392; Tiberias, 53, 93, 139 stairs. See synagogue architecture stele, 33, 97, 99, 101, 102, 103, 132, 393 stephanephoros, 514 Stephen, 5556 stoa. See synagogue architecture Stobi synagogue: 119, 250, 252, 27073, 292, 297, 299, 302, 316, 318; bima, 273, 301; converted into church, 211, 272; dating of, 27273, 373; inscription, 142, 27073, 302, 372, 373, 389, 394, 397, 429, 624; Jewish symbols (menorah), 272, 306; mosaic oor, 273, 36263; orientation, 273, 300, 327; pater synagoges, 270, 271, 42930; Patriarch, 270, 272, 459, 464; private home, 217, 272, 31819, 372, 388, 389, 405, 618; tetrastoon, 270, 272, 292; triclinium, 142, 270, 273, 292, 318, 387, 394 stone moldings/carvings, 222, 224, 267, 273, 307, 323, 358, 36061, 619 Strabo, 81, 122 strategos, 514 study, communal, 156. See also instruction, school, education
792
subject index
253, 273, 275, 276, 277, 279, 301, 313, 325, 326, 328, 335, 341, 342, 34347, 349, 357, 376, 379, 380, 387, 509, 608, 617, 634, 641, 642; sanctity of, 368, 369, 370. See also ambol/ambon; podium, platform colonnades, 27, 72, 91, 257, 508, 643 columns, pillars, 32, 55, 63, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 92, 94, 109, 185, 195, 197, 219, 222, 257, 263, 267, 269, 270, 271, 274, 275, 276, 277, 313, 322, 323, 324, 326, 327, 337, 34041, 342, 343, 344, 345, 349, 352, 354, 355, 371, 386, 387, 389, 459, 471, 474, 478, 492, 504, 603, 633, 641, 642, 643 courtyard, 33, 61, 70, 72, 73, 74, 86, 111, 135, 201, 202, 204, 213, 217, 225, 240, 263, 269, 272, 278, 302, 313, 314, 316, 318, 324, 330, 331, 332, 333, 340, 341, 344, 403, 408, 491, 504, 508, 616, 617, 618, 633, 641 doorposts, 360, 615 doors, doorways, 62, 63, 71, 108, 109, 199, 216, 237, 257, 263, 274, 282, 322, 325, 326, 330, 33536, 352, 360, 370, 387, 407, 408, 608, 617, 642. See also entrances dyplastoon, 53, 92, 93 oors, 69, 70, 222, 322, 323, 361 forecourt, 262, 267, 316 fountains, 226, 263, 280, 302, 331, 332, 333, 387 gates, 336, 337. See also entrances lintels, 198, 321, 325, 336, 337, 360, 361, 387, 603, 615, 642 main hall, 55, 62, 72, 87, 92, 104, 164, 169, 202, 237, 241, 258, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 268, 271, 274, 275, 276, 277, 279, 280, 282, 301, 313, 314, 316, 324, 326, 330, 331, 332, 336, 341, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 352, 353, 360, 375, 376, 379, 386, 389, 394, 408, 503, 504, 512, 523, 617, 631, 634; sanctity of, 638, 639. See also sanctuary nave, 257, 258, 263, 268, 269, 299, 301, 325, 338, 339, 343, 344, 345, 360, 363, 376, 379, 380, 617, 623, 634, 639, 642 palaestra, 26162, 618, 623 pilasters, 69, 360 portico, 74, 111, 260, 263, 268, 281, 323, 387, 508, 617 propylaeum, 27475, 340, 643
Sukkot, 101, 102, 132, 235, 344, 476, 554, 608; prayer for rain, 586; shofar, lulav, ethrog, 199, 234, 235, 34445, 438, 486, 554, 642; Simat Bet Hashoevah, 60, 329, 504; Torah reading, 43, 344, 538; worship, 145, 296 sundial, 87, 138, 331, 602 super orans (chief cantor), 304, 440, 512, 588 superstitio, 299 Sura, 482 Susannah (book), 41, 143 Susiya synagogue, 11, 199, 237, 335, 342, 346, 355; art, 358, 362; atrium, 330, 331; biblical motifs, 231, 362, 372, 373, 598; broadhouse type, 215, 319, 325; chancel screen, 342; dating, 177, 215; holy congregation, 238; iconoclasm, 365, 366; inscriptions, 364, 372, 373, 385, 387, 394, 445, 447, 522; Jewish symbols, 306, 307, 602, 603; location, 314, 315; mosaics, 224, 230, 358, 362, 372, 387, 522, 594; and Mt. Nebo church facade, 619; orientation, 196, 324, 325, 473 74; priests, 137, 447, 522; water installations, 333, 334 Sword of Moses (arba de-Moshe), 409, 471 synagoge, 1, 21, 23, 26, 44, 53, 85, 91, 103, 104, 106, 123, 128, 133, 138, 139, 146, 165, 171, 172, 418, 430, 631 synagogue architecture aisles, 54, 55, 69, 73, 92, 93, 257, 258, 263, 269, 325, 338, 379, 386, 617, 642 apse, 202, 215, 222, 237, 259, 263, 264, 266, 268, 275, 280, 282, 283, 301, 305, 319, 322, 325, 326, 335, 339, 341, 346, 352, 35556, 375, 379, 597, 608, 617, 641 atriums and water installations, 58, 59, 71, 74, 75, 92, 94, 108, 237, 247, 257, 261, 263, 264, 269, 272, 279, 292, 299, 305, 314, 316, 323, 325, 326, 33034, 336, 522, 617, 623, 641 balcony, 263, 341, 34243, 393, 503, 504, 512, 517 benches, 33, 55, 62, 63, 65, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 87, 93, 94, 108, 109, 112, 164, 169, 185, 229, 253, 263, 264, 266, 267, 273, 275, 276, 277, 313, 318, 323, 326, 327, 33740, 342, 348, 349, 370, 379, 421, 473, 476, 633; sanctity of, 368, 370 bima, 9394, 149, 196, 197, 203, 215, 222, 237,
subject index
stairs, 342, 349, 387, 504, 509 stoa, 91, 92, 95, 108, 272, 341, 349, 385, 387, 471, 580, 643 tetrastoon, 270, 272, 273, 292 triclinium, 63, 7374, 104, 142, 270, 272, 273, 276, 292, 294, 317, 318, 387, 394, 424, 644 vestibule, 62, 257, 274, 276, 387 Synagogue of the Boule, 207, 489 Synagogue of the Rebellion. See Maradata synagogue Synagogue of the Weavers (or Coppersmiths), 489 synodos, 130. See also associations Syracuse, 270, 342, 343, 387 Syria, 12426, 376, 571, 615; archisynagogue, 297, 417, 42223, 424; Greeks, 125, 12627; inscriptions, 12, 17, 417, 508, 626; Jewish community, 82, 124, 388; and Judaism, 125 26, 296; literary evidence, 124, 127; paganJewish tension, 125, 12627; pagans, 126, 320; presbyter, 432; Roman, 10, 45, 67, 68, 125; synagogues, 125, 126, 211, 250, 25257, 29293, 511, 622; temples, 142, 184, 32425, 615, 633; women, 508, 511 Syriac, 115, 244, 516 Syria-Palaestina, 45 Tabernacle, 5, 39, 197, 202, 232, 236, 244, 255, 329, 335, 350, 362, 602, 610, 639, 643; menorah, 484, 603; sacrices, 241, 362, 607, 608 Tacitus: freedmen, 56 taka, 351 tamui, 397. See also charity Tamid (daily) sacrice, 60, 241, 356, 526, 570, 608 Tanais, 293 R. Tanuma, 495 R. Tanum b. anilai, 400 Taphos, 388 taqqanot (enactments), 199, 643; synagogue practice, 19899, 541, 554, 557 . Tarbanat, 383, 474, 49293 targum, 2, 3, 9, 24, 15962, 222, 238, 406, 580, 634, 643; and academy, 580; Aramaic, 627; dating, 15960, 161, 162, 214; and Dura frescoes, 596, 599; Genizah, 579; Late Antiquity,
793
6, 578, 592, 627; and liturgy, 161, 165, 376, 468, 569, 588, 599, 627, 640; and midrash, 159, 579; rabbinic sources, 160, 471, 47374, 532, 578; and rabbis, 471, 472, 474, 491, 492 93, 592; Second Temple period, 5, 159, 160; study of, 13, 401; and synagogue art, 471, 580, 596, 599; synagogue as congregation, 23; and Torah reading, 146, 152, 159, 343, 376, 380, 383, 490, 577, 57879 Targum Neoti, 13, 160, 471 Targum Onqelos, 160, 471, 580, 592 Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, 160, 214, 238, 471, 478, 493, 579, 580, 588, 592 Tarichaeae, 383 Tarragona: archisynagogogue, 417; didadaskalos, 303; rabbi, 303 Tarsians, 56, 91; synagogue of, 57, 207, 489. See also Synagogue of the Weavers (or Coppersmiths) Tation, 340, 5089 teacher, 157, 265, 303, 304, 330, 337, 376, 379, 383, 384, 390, 391, 396, 399400, 401, 402, 403, 405, 410, 414, 421, 426, 436, 44245, 446, 457, 469, 474, 487, 488, 489, 490, 554, 643. See also sofer tellin, 475, 551, 552, 558 Tel Bet Shean, 216, 328 temenos. See sacred space Temple Mount, 43, 80, 244, 408; academy, 60; excavations, 602; Josephus, 61; Mishnah, 61, 179; as Mt. Moriah, 254; synagogue, 60, 61, 76, 240; targum, 160 Temple of Apollo, 405, 409 Temple of Artemis, 257, 315 Temple of Asclepius, 409, 531, 629 Temple of Dionysius, 531, 629 templum, 128 Teos, 388, 417, 424, 425, 426, 531, 629 Terracina: Jewish community, 211 Tertullian, 334, 481, 558, 573 tetrastoon. See synagogue architecture tevah, 202, 351, 351, 352 theater, 100, 295, 392, 495; Antioch, 53, 68; Daphne, 126, 184; Ephesus, 53; Miletus, 294; open-air, 100, 325; Priene, 267; seating arrangements, 95
794 s u b j e c t i n d e x
Thebes, 88; synagogue at Arsinoe, 427 Theodosian Code, xvi, 9, 46163; archisynagogue, 418, 423, 425, 462, 469; Patriarch, 193, 272, 390, 433, 46163, 464, 469, 524; priests, 524; synagogue ocials, 193, 390, 429, 430, 433, 469, 524 Theodosius I, xvi, 175, 298, 464 Theodosius II, 461, 462 Theodotion translation of Susannah, 41 Theodotos inscription, 8, 138; Diaspora synagogue in Jerusalem, 48, 5657, 58, 59, 449; discovery, 5758; leadership, 58, 59, 120, 137, 149, 42526, 432, 448, 523; priests, 58, 104, 522; synagoge, 53; synagogue activities, 58, 59, 75, 135, 140, 144, 145, 16364, 194, 318, 398, 406; Torah reading, 48, 58, 16364; water installations, 58, 75, 332, 333 theosebeis, 124, 293. See also God-fearers Theos Hypsistos, 85, 109, 121, 128, 129, 293 Therapeutae, 89, 501, 504; communal meals, 115, 141; communal prayer, 169, 543; sermon, 89, 157; study, 11617, 153, 156, 157; women, 503; worship, 8 Thessalonica: Jewry, 117; synagogue, 116, 501 Thessaly, 510 thiasos, 130, 173. See also associations Thrace, 432, 510 Thyatira (Asia Minor) inscription, 115 Tiber (river), 105, 285 Tiberias, 71, 187, 192, 207, 339, 366, 391, 400, 445, 489; academy, 340, 410, 487; archon, 53, 427; Great Academy, 337; Hadrianeum, 184; Herod Antipas, 53, 226; Jewish community, 8, 148, 203, 410, 414; Jewish revolt (66 c.e.), 52, 102, 139, 391; pagan imagery, 481; Patriarch, 391, 458, 459, 460, 493; priests, 520; pronomeno/pronoetes, 448; purication, 401; stadium, 53, 100 Tiberias synagogues/proseuchai, 46, 5254, 76, 138, 184, 220, 293, 327, 406, 413, 489, 501, 632; building activity (third century), 11, 185; converted into pagan temple, 184; fast day, 54, 75, 165; inscriptions, 179, 332, 336, 373, 448, 449, 522; library, 405; mats, 337; meeting-place, 8, 52, 53, 54, 75, 93, 102, 139, 391; menorah, 358; number of, 187, 2067, 340, 478; rosh knesset, 418; synagogue sanctity, 78; worship, 146, 165. See also ammat Tiberias synagogue Tipasa (Mauretania), 298 Tisha bAv. See Ninth of Av Tishri: festivals, 26, 101, 234, 235 tithes, 31, 240, 460, 461 Titus, 126, 148, 184, 603 Tivon synagogue, 207, 627 Tobiad Hyrcanus, 225 Tobit (book), 42 Torah ark, chest, shrine, 75, 93, 109, 196, 198, 235, 237, 247, 251, 253, 263, 265, 301, 305, 306, 322, 323, 326, 343, 345, 346, 347, 349, 351 56, 357, 358, 360, 361, 369, 375, 376, 377, 379, 380, 387, 409, 558, 634; sanctity of, 14647, 148, 236, 296, 347, 356, 36869, 633; synagogue mosaics, 189, 216, 218, 232, 233, 235, 236, 307, 340, 342, 35152, 362, 367, 37071, 597, 602, 608, 610, 633. See also aedicula; arana, arona, bet arona, aron; naos; nomophylakion; tevah reading, 14653, 154, 53640, 629; Alexandrian synagogue, 8, 438; Babylonia, 38, 569, 577; bima, 237, 345, 376; blessings before and after, 168; centrality of, 148, 150, 164, 165, 166, 380, 441; at city-gate, 38, 43; Diaspora, 139, 164, 204; Essenes, 15253; and haftarah reading, 50, 154, 165, 538, 57778, 642; Haqhel ceremony, 43, 420, 538, 642; azzan, 438, 439, 441; azzan knesset and rosh knesset, 4344, 137, 420, 421; high priest, 146, 151, 420; holiday readings, 53738, 539, 564, 577, 589; language, 558; maamad ceremony, maamadot, 3839; maftir, 200; minors, 506; parashah, 538, 643; polemic against foreign inuence, 38; priestly courses, priests, 152, 525; and Qaddish, 590, 591; quorum, 446; and rabbis, 468, 492, 539, 540, 55759, 564; Restoration period, 23, 2526, 150; Sabbath and holidays, 150, 392, 538, 539, 556; safra, 490; Second Temple period, 152, 378; and sermon, 158, 165, 58082, 586; short readings, 540; sidrah, 568, 643; study of, 148, 152, 155,
subject index
628; synagogue ritual, 3, 79, 133, 148, 158, 165, 171, 179, 371, 375, 392, 421, 539, 570, 579, 629; and targumim, 151, 159, 165, 375, 458, 577, 57880, 581, 642; Temple worship, 3839, 137, 420; Theodotos inscription and Torah ark, 75; town square, 201; reading cycle (triennial vs. annual), 151, 152, 53638, 567, 569; women, 505, 506, 512 Tortosa: rabbi, 303 town/city square, plaza, 30, 33, 40, 455, 481; liturgy, 408, 531; sanctity of, 201, 368, 381 Trachonitis, 383 Tractate Soferim, 353, 377, 440, 496, 502, 532, 588, 589, 590, 591 Trajan, 147 Tralles, 343, 374, 387, 509 Transjordan, 327 translation. See targum Transtiberinum (Trastevere), 107, 285. See also catacombs treasurer. See gizbarit triclinium (dining hall). See synagogue architecture Tripolitania, 510 Tripolitans, synagogue of, 285, 427, 510 trisagion, 571, 572, 573, 643, 644 Tunis, 279 twelve tribes (biblical motif ), 231 Tyche (Fortuna), 482 typology of synagogues, 10, 76, 21415, 32021 Tyre, Tyrians, 328; archisynagogue, 417, 448, 449; church (temple of God), 244, 248, 333; community and synagogue in Sepphoris, 207, 373 tzitzit, 512, 569 R. Ulla, 436, 477 Umm el-Qanatir, 353 Usha: era, 536; mats, 337 Utica, 427 Valens, 462 Valentinian I, 238, 406 Vatican library, 13 Vatican II, 14
795
Venetia, 510 Venosa (catacombs): archisynagogue, 417, 426; inscriptions, 251; mater synagoges, 431, 510; pateressa, 510; presbyter, presbytera, 432, 510; rabbi, 303 Vernaclesians: synagogue in Rome, 284, 285, 430, 434 Vespasian, 68, 126, 148 vestibule. See synagogue architecture Vettenos: Theodotos family, 57, 58, 59, 149 Via Appia, 284, 285 Via Nomentana, 284 Via Severiana, 274 Vigna Randanini, 283. See also catacombs Villa Torlonia, 284. See also catacombs Vitalis, Saint, 597 Volubilis: rabbi, 303 Volumnesians: synagogue in Rome, 84, 285, 427, 432 Volumnius, 105, 284, 432 washing before prayer, 55, 6465, 189, 240, 263, 33133, 491. See also basin water, location of synagogues near, 114, 278, 302, 305, 316, 334 Water Gate ( Jerusalem), 32, 36 water installations (in synagogue). See basin; miqveh; synagogue architectureatriums and water installations; washing before prayer West, 305, 597, 625 windows, 119, 325, 359, 615 wisdom schools, 398 women, xii, 421; academy, 501, 518; attraction to Judaism, 117, 132, 294, 501, 502, 511; biblical, 500, 51516; Christianity, 502, 518; church, 499, 511, 517, 634; donors, 104, 260, 374, 505, 5079, 51213, 515; uldah, 24; impurity, 517; inscriptions, 258, 260, 505, 5079, 51011, 513, 514, 515; Jerusalem Temple, 502, 505, 511; leadership, 2, 432, 500, 506, 50911, 512, 513 15, 516; liturgical roles, 5057, 51718; pagan, 374, 509, 518; Pauls missionary activity, 117, 500501; sacrices, 505; Samaritan, 502; seating, 95, 157, 341, 342, 500, 5025, 509, 51112, 51617; sympathizers in Damascus, 126, 501; synagogue, 15, 114, 117, 499518, 527; syna-
796 s u b j e c t i n d e x
women (continued ) gogue attendance, 500502; Torah reading, 501, 505, 5067, 512 Womens Court, 2, 43, 329, 502, 504, 511 womens gallery, 341, 342, 504 workshops, 230, 282, 619, 623 Xenephyris: proseuche, 87, 387 Yaa, 215; gural art, 224; mosaic, 231, 362, 363; orientation, 328 Yannai (paytan), 13, 587 Yavnean period, xvi, 163, 174; rabbis and prayer, 11, 24, 162, 163, 182, 408, 493, 531, 534, 53536, 54042, 54350, 559; rabbis as priests, 520 Yavneh, 441; academy, 341, 348 Yazid II (caliph), 366 Yehud coins, 225 Yemen: priestly courses, 239, 524, 587; synagogue, 251 R. Yoanan, 184, 201, 229, 317, 356, 364, 391, 403, 404, 437, 446, 476, 477, 481, 48283, 486, 487, 48889, 490, 493, 494, 497, 501, 521, 545, 554, 555, 563, 565, 566, 567, 570, 578, 591, 621 R. Yoanan (Susiya), 445, 522 R. Yoanan b. Maria, 336 R. Yoanan b. Zakkai, xvi, 199, 348, 526, 531, 53536, 545 R. Yoanan bar Napa, xvi Yoanan the priest (paytan), 528 Yom Kippur, 537; Avodah, 239, 584, 586; confessional prayers, 547, 564; and Jewish symbols, 235; in piyyut, 586; synagogue, 421; synagogue ritual, 296, 525, 537, 539, 548, 568; Temple, 239, 334, 525, 548; Torah reading in Temple, 43, 344, 420, 437, 540 R. Yonah, 317, 368, 371, 482, 490 R. Yonatan, 409, 49394 R. Yonatan b. R. Eliezer, 404 R. Yose b. R. Abun, 471 R. Yose b. alafta, 501, 557 Yose b. Yose (high priest, paytan), 528, 584 R.Yosi, 114, 184, 317, 436, 473, 482, 554, 570 R.Yosi b. Qisma, 184 Yosi of Maon, 39192, 582 zaqen. See elders Zealots, 46, 93 Zechariah, 604 Zedekiah, at city-gate, 32 R. Zeira, 368, 407, 486, 570, 600 R. Zenon, 437, 441 Zephaniah: preaching in synagogue, 24 Zion, Mt., 208 Zoar, 321 zodiac, 621; inscriptions, 372, 459, 606, 608; piyyut, 586, 599; signicance, 599, 601, 605, 607, 610, 632; stone moldings, 361; synagogue mosaic oors, 5, 218, 219, 221, 224, 230, 232, 306, 307, 36162, 389, 470, 471, 474, 484, 580, 595, 596, 598, 602, 6057, 608, 620, 633