Read Enchantress: A Novel of Rav Hisda's Daughter Online
Authors: Maggie Anton
PART TWO: King Hormizd’s and King Shapur’s Reigns
To my husband, Dave—
without your love, encouragement, and support, Rashi’s daughters and Rav Hisda’s daughter would still be merely figments of my imagination.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I
thank my outstanding editor at Plume, Denise Roy, who wielded her line edits with scalpel-like precision to cut extraneous and duplicate material so the flow improved and the reader was left eager to learn more. It was an education and a pleasure to work with such a consummate professional.
Kudos to Beth Lieberman for editing advice that never let me forget that the Talmud scenes should be about more than just Talmud, and that my heroine and hero must fulfill their characters’ arcs. Many thanks to my literary agent, Susanna Einstein, who has been negotiating for me since the early days of my career. My daughter, Emily, a voracious reader of historical fiction, spent hours critiquing my early drafts and never hesitated to lambast any scenes that didn’t measure up to her exacting standards.
I must also acknowledge the myriad of scholars who offered their assistance, with special appreciation to my Talmud study partners, Henry Wudl of HUC and Janet Sternfeld Davis of AJU.
Last, but not least, I offer love and gratitude to my husband, Dave. He had no idea that after thirty-five years of marriage to a chemist with regular working hours, he would abruptly be catapulted into living with an author who stayed up into the early hours writing, traveled all over the country (sometimes for weeks at a time), and whose income was erratic to say the least. He bore all this disruption with patience and a sense of humor, much better than I would have done if our situation had been reversed.
TIME LINE
450 | Cyrus the Great allows Ezra and captured Jews to return to Zion from Babylonia, but many remain there. |
332 | Alexander the Great defeats Persian king Darius, Judea and Babylonia become Greek provinces. |
167 | Hasmonean/Maccabean revolt in Judea (basis of Hanukah). Judea again ruled by Jewish kings. |
63 | Pompey conquers Hasmonean state, Judea now ruled by Rome. |
ca. 40 | Hillel comes to Jerusalem from Babylonia and founds school to teach Torah. |
37 | Herod becomes client king of Judea, dies in 4 BCE. |
6 | Judea becomes Roman province. |
35 | Jesus crucified. |
66 | Judean Jews rebel against Rome. |
70 | Judean rebellion fails. Temple in Jerusalem destroyed. |
132 | Bar Kokhba revolt against Rome, in Judea. |
135 | Bar Kokhba revolt is crushed. Judea renamed Palestina. |
200 | Mishna (Oral Law) redacted by patriarch, Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi. |
220 | Rav returns to Babylonia from Eretz Israel. He and Samuel establish Torah schools in Sura and Pumbedita, respectively. |
226 | Sasanian Persians conquer Parthia. |
230 | Hisda born in Babylonia. |
241 | Shapur 1 becomes king of Persia. |
250 | Jews agree to accept Persian law in Jewish courts. Jews receive autonomy within that limitation. |
260 | Shapur 1 defeats Rome, captures emperor Valerian. |
270 | Rava (Abba bar Joseph) born in Babylonia. Rav’s grandson Nehemiah becomes exilarch (through 313). |
284 | Diocletian becomes Roman emperor (through 305). |
292 | Narseh becomes king of Persia. |
296 | Narseh declares war on Rome. |
298 | Narseh defeated; Persia loses Armenia and upper Euphrates. Persian capital Ctesiphon sacked. |
301 | Narseh abdicates in favor of son Hormizd II. |
307 | Constantine, a Christian, becomes emperor of Rome. |
309 | Hormizd II dies. Persian crown placed on pregnant wife’s belly. |
310 | Shapur II born and declared king of Persia. |
313 | Mar Huna becomes exilarch (through 337). Constantine issues Edict of Milan and makes Christianity an official religion in Rome. |
325 | Roman Palestina administered by Christians. Last remaining Torah school in Tiberias is closed. |
328 | Shapur II crowned king of Persia and immediately attacks Arabs. |
337 | Constantine dies. Roman throne divided among his three sons. |
350 | Jerusalem Talmud complete. |
359 | Shapur II begins war with Rome. |
361 | Julian the Apostate becomes emperor of Rome, declares war against Persia and begins to rebuild Temple in Jerusalem. |
363 | An earthquake in Israel destroys Sepphoris and the partially rebuilt Temple in Jerusalem. Rome defeated at Samara. Death of Emperor Julian. |
380 | Christianity established as Rome’s only official religion. |
400 | Yazdgerd becomes king of Persia, marries a Jewish princess, and inaugurates golden age of Sasanian kingdom. |
424 | Rav Ashi dies, and redacting of the Babylonian Talmud begins. |
425 | Rome abolishes office of Nasi (patriarch) in Palestina. |
500 | Death of Ravina, head of Sura school and last sage named in the Babylonian Talmud. |
570 | Birth of Mohammed. |
630 | Rise of Islam. |
638 | Omar captures Jerusalem. Jews allowed to live there for the first time in nearly five hundred years. |
642 | Palestina, Syria, Egypt, and Babylonia fall to Muslim Arabs. |
650/700 | Stammaim (anonymous editors) produce the final form of the Babylonian Talmud |
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Abba bar Joseph (b. 270)—
a.k.a. Rava; Hisdadukh’s second husband, from Machoza
Abaye—
Rava’s best friend and study partner in Pumbedita