Ravina II HaKohen or Rabina II (
Hebrew: רב אבינא בר רב הונא or רבינא האחרון; died 475
CE or 500 CE)[1] was a
Babylonian rabbi of the 5th century (seventh and eighth generations of
amoraim).
He, along with his teacher
Rav Ashi, were considered "the end of Hora'ah (teaching)".[2] Traditionally both of them are regarded as responsible for redacting the
Babylonian Talmud.
Biography
Most scholars agree that the rabbi here in question was Ravina the son of R. Huna bar Avin HaKohen, and not Ravina II, the colleague of
Rav Ashi who died before Rav Ashi.[3]
He did not remember his father, R. Huna, who died while Ravina was still a child, but the Talmud states several times that his mother communicated to him the opinions held by his father.[4] After his father's death, his maternal uncle
Ravina I became his guardian.[5]
Ravina II officiated as judge at
Sura shortly after Rav Ashi's death,[6] and was a colleague of
Mar bar Rav Ashi,[7] although he was not so prominent. After
Rabbah Tosafa'ah's death, Ravina became, for a year (474), director of the
Sura Academy.[8] Simultaneously,
Rabbah Jose served as head of the
Pumbedita academy. Ravina served as leader of the Jewish community in Babylonia for 22 years. One year before his death, all the Babylonian synagogues were closed, and Jewish infants were handed over to the
Magians.[9] He died on the 13th of
Kislev in 474/475[10] or 499/500
CE.[11]
References
^The discrepancy in the date of death stems from the author of Dorot HaRishonim who puts Ravina's death at 475 CE, and Rabbi
Sherira Gaon who, in his Iggeret of Rabbi Sherira Gaon (original Aramaic text), puts his death in 811 of the
Seleucid era, a year corresponding to anno 500
CE. According to Sherira Gaon, the end of the Talmudic redaction is marked by the death of Ravina II (see:
Gaon, Sherira (1988). The Iggeres of Rav Sherira Gaon. Translated by
Nosson Dovid Rabinowich. Jerusalem: Rabbi Jacob Joseph School Press - Ahavath Torah Institute Moznaim. p. 116.
OCLC923562173.).
^Sherira Gaon (1988). The Iggeres of Rav Sherira Gaon. Translated by Nosson Dovid Rabinowich. Jerusalem: Rabbi Jacob Joseph School Press - Ahavath Torah Institute Moznaim. p. 79.
OCLC923562173., s.v. Ravina, who cites Rabbi HaLevi, vol. 6, chaps. 4-7, who, in turn, cites Rabbi
Sherira Gaon in ch. 11, p. 116.
^Abraham ibn Daud "Sefer ha-Ḳabbalah," in Neubauer, "M. J. C." i. 61
^Sherira Gaon (1988). The Iggeres of Rav Sherira Gaon. Translated by Nosson Dovid Rabinowich. Jerusalem: Rabbi Jacob Joseph School Press - Ahavath Torah Institute Moznaim. p. 118.
OCLC923562173.; cf. Widengen, G. (1963). "The Status of the Jews in the Sassanian Empire". Iranica Antiqua I: 142–143.