Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Simon bar Kokhba

Encyclopedia : S : SI : SIM : Simon bar Kokhba



 

Simon bar Kokhba (שמעון בר כוכבא) (known as Bar Kokhba, or Bar Kochva or Bar Kochba [any of which would mean "son of a star"], in Aramaic, was also called Shimon ben Kosba [שמעון בן כוסבא] and Bar Koziva [בר כוזיבא] also commonly transliterated Kochba) was the last Jewish monarch of Judea, and led what is known as Bar Kokhba's revolt against the Roman Empire in 132 CE, establishing an independent Jewish state which he ruled for three years as Nasi ("prince," or "president"). His state was conquered by the Romans in 135 CE following a two-year war.

Originally named Simon Bar Koziba, he was given the name Bar Kokhba (Aramaic for "Son of a Star", referring to [Numbers 24:17], "A star has shot off Jacob") by his contemporary, the Jewish sage Rabbi Akiva, who contemplated the possibility that Bar Kochba could be the long-awaited Jewish Messiah. To some he was "Simon bar Kozba" — Son of the lie.

Second Jewish revolt

Despite the devastation wrought by the Romans during the First Jewish-Roman War (6673 CE), which left the population and countryside in ruins, another Jewish rebellion took place 60 years later that established the last Jewish Monarchy in Judea, which lasted for three years. The war began very poorly for the Romans who faced a completely unified Jewish force. The annihilation of a complete Roman legion with auxiliaries resulted in the Romans committing no less than twelve legions, amounting to one third to one half of the entire Roman army, to reconquer this now independent kingdom. Being outnumbered and taking heavy casualties, the Romans refused to engage their army in an open battle and instead adopted a scorched earth policy which decimated the Judean populace, slowly grinding away at the will of the Judeans to sustain the war. Bar Kokhba took up refuge in the fortress of Betar. The Romans eventually captured it and killed all the defenders. According to Cassius Dio, 580,000 Jews were killed, 50 fortified towns and 985 villages razed.

After Bar Kokhba's defeat, Jerusalem was razed, Jews were forbidden to live there, and a new Roman city, Aelia Capitolina, was built in its place. This was a costly victory for Rome, and Emperor Hadrian, when reporting to the Roman Senate, did not begin with the customary greeting: "I and my army are well", and refused a triumphant entrance, the only recorded instance in history where this was the case. In the aftermath of the war, Emperor Hadrian renamed the province of Judaea as Syria Palaestina, named for the Philistines, in order to humiliate the Jewish population by naming it after their ancient enemies. The name persists to this day as Palestine.

Over the past few decades, much new information about the revolt has come to light, thanks mainly to the discovery of several collections of letters, some possibly by Bar Kokhba himself, in the caves overlooking the Dead Sea. These letters can now be seen at the Israel Museum.

Bar Kokhba in the arts

Bar Kokhba was the subject of an operetta, Bar Kokhba, written by Abraham Goldfaden some time between 1883 and 1885. It was written in the wake of the pogroms following the 1881 assassination of Czar Alexander II of Russia as the tide turned against Jewish emancipation. Another operetta on the subject of Bar Kokhba was written by the Russian-Jewish emigre composer Yaacov Bilansky Levanon in Palestine in the 1920s.

John Zorn's Masada Chamber Ensemble recorded an album called Bar Kokhba, showing a photograph of the Letter of Bar Kokhba to Yeshua, son of Galgola on the cover.

The Bar Kokhba game

According to a legend, during his reign, Bar Kokhba was once presented a mutilated man, who had his tongue ripped out and hands cut off. As he was unable to talk or write, he wasn't able to tell who his attackers were, so Bar Kokhba decided to ask simple questions to which the dying man was able to nod or shake his head with his last movements, thus they were able to apprehend the murderers.

In Hungary, this legend spawned the "Bar Kohkba game", in which one of the two players comes up with a word or object, and the other one has to find out by asking questions only to be answered with "yes" or "no". The verb "kibarkochbázni" ("to Bar Kochba out") became a common language verb meaning "retrieving information in an extremely tedious way". [link]

In English speaking countries, this is known as Twenty Questions.

Bibliography

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: