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Rabbi Akiba (Akiva) ben Joseph
(50-135 C.E.)
A poor, semi-literate shepherd, Akiba became one
of Judaism's greatest scholars. He developed the exegetical method of
the Mishnah,
linking each traditional practice to a basis in the biblical text,
and systematized the material that later became the Mishnah.
Rabbi Akiba was active in the Bar Kokhba rebellion
against Rome, 132-135 C.E.. He believed that Bar Kokhba was the Moshiach
(messiah), though some other rabbis
openly ridiculed him for that belief (the Talmud
records another rabbi as saying, "Akiba, grass will grow in your
cheeks and still the son of David will not have come.") When the
Bar Kokhba rebellion failed, Rabbi Akiba was taken by the Roman
authorities and tortured to death.
Source: Judaism 101 |
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