Rabbi Nehorai
Also known as 'Exile yourself to a place of Torah'
100 CE–170 CE · Tannaim · Usha (Galilee)
A Tanna of the mid-2nd century CE, best known for his teaching in Pirkei Avot (4:14): 'Exile yourself to a place of Torah, and do not assume it will come to you.' Some traditions identify Nehorai with Rabbi Meir or Rabbi Nehemiah.
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Usha (Galilee)אושאGalilee, Roman period
What they did here
A sage of the Land of Israel in the Usha generation, remembered above all for urging students to seek out a place of Torah.
Usha (Galilee) in this era
Under Roman rule, Usha in Lower Galilee became a vital refuge for Jewish learning after the catastrophe of 70 CE. When the Temple fell and Jerusalem's authority crumbled, the Tannaitic sages—among them Rabbi Meir, whose sharp dialectical genius shaped generations of halakhic reasoning—relocated their academy northward, away from Roman suspicion and toward communities less ravaged by war. The small town hummed with intellectual intensity as scholars debated the minutiae of Jewish law, wrestling with how to preserve and adapt rabbinic tradition without the Temple's ritual center. The academy at Usha functioned as a kind of mobile court, where sages hammered out consensus on everything from agricultural laws to purity rules, their voices echoing through study houses as disciples committed vast legal arguments to memory. Even after the Bar Kochba disaster (132–135 CE), which brought fresh Roman repression, Usha held firm as a beacon of continuity—a place where the Jewish people reconstructed their spiritual life through argument, interpretation, and the sheer determination to remain Jewish in a Roman world.
About Usha (Galilee)
# Usha In the shadowed years after Rome's brutal suppression of the Bar Kokhba Revolt, Usha emerged as a quiet haven in the rolling hills of lower Galilee, a sanctuary where Jewish learning could breathe again. The Roman Empire held dominion over the region with an iron grip, yet the small town—nestled between fertile valleys and olive groves—became an unexpected center of rabbinic reconstruction. Here, a community of sages regathered to rebuild the shattered institutions of Jewish law and practice, establishing what would become the foundation of the Mishnah itself. Though modest in size, Usha's Jewish population punched far above its weight, drawing scholars from across the Roman territories who came to study, debate, and codify the oral traditions that Rome's legions could not destroy. The town's relative obscurity and distance from imperial surveillance made it ideal for this delicate work—far enough from Caesarea's Roman governors to operate with a measure of autonomy, yet close enough to the roads that connected Galilee's villages and towns. In its modest schoolhouses and study halls, a generation of brilliant minds wrestled with questions of law, ethics, and continuity, ensuring that Judaism would not perish with the state, but would transform and endure.
In Usha (Galilee) at the same time
Yehudah ben Bava, Yehoshua ben Korcha, Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel II, R. Nechemia, Eliezer ben Yaakov (II), Eleazar ben Shamua
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with Rabbi Nehorai’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Rabbi Nehorai’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.