Zechariah ben Abkilus (Hebrew: רבי זכריה בן אבקולס, also Zechariah ben Abqilus, Zecharya ben Avkulas, Amphikalos) was a Jewish scholar at the end of the Second Temple period. He lived in Jerusalem at the time of the destruction of the Second Temple. According to the Talmud, the authority which he enjoyed among the rabbis of Jerusalem was the cause of the downfall of the city. According to Lamentations Rabbah, Zechariah was present at the banquet famous for the affair of Kamsa and Bar Kamsa;[1] and though his influence might have prevented the disgrace of Bar Ḳamtza, he did not exercise it. According to the Talmudic account of the episode, when a calf sent by the emperor was blemished by Bar Ḳamtza[2] prior to being received as an offering to the Temple,[3] the Rabbis would have accepted it to frustrate Bar Ḳamtza, had not Zechariah, ruled against this out of concern of setting an erroneous precedent for later generations.[4]

Zechariah ben Abkilus
זכריה בן אבקולס
Personal
Born
Zechariah ben Abkilus
Died
ReligionJudaism
EraSecond Temple period

The people wished to kill Bar Ḳamtza so that he should not be able to tell the emperor of the refusal, but Zechariah once more restrained them from carrying out their design out of concern for setting a dangerous precedent. R. Johanan, on the other hand, or, according to another source, R. Jose, declared that the humility of Zechariah b. Abḳilus, in refusing to cast his vote, caused the destruction of the Temple.[5][6][7] He is recorded as following neither the Bet Hillel nor the Bet Shammai with regard to holding date-stones on the Sabbath.[8] He is probably referred to by Josephus.[9][non-primary source needed]

References

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  1. ^ Lamentations Rabbah 4
  2. ^ Kass, Larry. The Story of Kamsa and Bar Kamtza. Jewish Magazine. July 1999, accessed Feb 3, 2021.
  3. ^ "Exile and Redemption: Meditations on Jewish History," Joseph Grunblatt, Ktav Publishing, 1988, p. 108
  4. ^ Talmud Bavli, Gittin, 55b-56a
  5. ^ TB Gittin 56a:2-6
  6. ^ Tosefta, TB Shabbat xvi. [xvii.] 6
  7. ^ Lamentations Rabbah iv. 2
  8. ^ TB Shabbat 143a; Tosefta Shabbat l.c
  9. ^ "The Jewish War (B. J.)" ii. 17, §§ 2-3
  • Grätz, History of the Jews, iii. 458, 509, 817–819;
  • Derenbourg, Hist. p. 257.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Zechariah Ben Abḳilus (Amphikalos)". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. By the executive committee of the editorial board, M. Seligsohn, Kaufmann Kohler