Choni HaMe'agel
110 BCE–60 BCE · BCE · Jerusalem
Choni HaMe'agel (Honi the Circle-Drawer, c. 1st century BCE) was a Second-Temple-era charismatic miracle-worker whose dramatic rain-prayer episode is preserved in the Mishnah (Ta'anit 3:8) and Bavli (Ta'anit 23a). In response to a prolonged drought he drew a circle on the ground, stood inside it, and refused to leave until God sent rain — a kind of holy chutzpah that Shimon ben Shetach called borderline blasphemy yet acknowledged was effective. Another famous Talmudic story has him sleep for 70 years (the Bavli's 'Rip Van Winkle' narrative) and awake to a generation that did not know him. Josephus calls him Onias the Righteous and reports his murder by the Hasmonean factions during their 65 BCE civil war.
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JerusalemירושליםJudea
What they did here
Active in late-Hasmonean Judea; murdered during the 65 BCE Hasmonean civil war according to Josephus.
Jerusalem in this era
Jerusalem during the Tannaitic era was a city of shattering transformation. Under Roman imperial rule, the Second Temple stood as the spiritual and administrative heart of Jewish life until its catastrophic destruction in 70 CE—an upheaval that forced the entire apparatus of Jewish learning and authority to relocate northward to Yavneh and beyond. Before that rupture, the city had been home to a thriving scholarly aristocracy; the Temple's priestly classes, the Pharisaic sages, and the sanhedrin conducted their debates within the Temple precincts and in the crowded streets of the Jewish quarter. After 70 CE, Jerusalem became a wounded city under tightened Roman surveillance, its Jewish population diminished but not extinguished, its spiritual center now ghostly ruins. Yet even in diminishment, the memory of Jerusalem's academies—where figures like Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai had taught Torah before the siege—remained vivid in the consciousness of the dispersed rabbinical movement. The city's tragic centrality transformed it from a living seat of power into the symbolic heart of Jewish mourning and messianic hope, a reality that would define Jewish consciousness for centuries to come.
About Jerusalem
# Jerusalem Jerusalem has remained the spiritual and intellectual heart of Jewish learning across nearly two thousand years of exile, diaspora, and return. Perched on the stony hills of Judea, this ancient city—ruled by Romans, Byzantine Christians, Muslim caliphates, Crusaders, Ottomans, and finally restored to Jewish sovereignty in 1948—never ceased to draw sages seeking to study Torah in the very place where the Second Temple once stood. The Jewish community here, though often small and struggling under foreign rule, maintained an unbroken chain of learning and mysticism: the city's narrow stone alleyways in the Old City's Jewish Quarter became pathways to yeshivas where kabbalah flourished, especially from the sixteenth century onward when mystical teachings transformed the study of Jewish law and theology. The climate is cool and dry on the heights, with Jerusalem's limestone buildings glowing pale gold in the Mediterranean sun. What made Jerusalem irreplaceable was not merely its holy history but the conviction that studying and teaching Torah within its walls carried cosmic significance—that the city itself was a living connection to revelation. Today, Jerusalem pulses with dozens of major yeshivas and study halls, their students debating Talmud in the same streets where Jewish learning has never truly been interrupted.
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.