Huna ben Joshua
Huna ben Joshua (Hebrew: רב הונא בריה דרב יהושע, read as Rav Huna BeReia DeRav Yehoshua; died 410[1]) was a Babylonian rabbi, of the fifth generation of amoraim.
- For the Tanna sage of the fifth generation, see Huna Kamma.
- For the Amora sage of the second generation, see Rav Huna.
- For the Amora sage of the third generation, see Raba bar Rav Huna.
- For the Amora sage of the sixth generation, see Huna b. Nathan.
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Biography
He was considered as one of the most prominent Amoraic sages of his generation.
He was a student of Rava,[2] who seems to have been his principal teacher, and who sometimes praised him,[3] but occasionally blamed him.[4] He appears to have been the pupil of Abaye also.[5]
He was a colleague and a scholarly opponent (bar plugata) of Rav Papa, from whom he was inseparable, both in and out of school.[6]
When Rav Papa became head of the yeshiva of Naresh (an academy that later was relocated to Mata Mehasia, a suburb of Sura and its Yeshiva there), Huna was appointed president of the general assembly ("resh kallah") in the same school.[7]
During his studies under Rava, he earned his livelihood from a small landed property, enabling him to make the time needed for his studies. Later on, he became a business partner of his colleague Rav Papa, and earned his living from selling sesame.
Huna was wealthy.[8] He never walked more than four cubits bareheaded.[9] He ate very slowly, so that Rav Papa consumed in the same time four times as much and Rabina eight times as much.[10]
Huna lived to a great age, outliving Rava by 57 years. Once in the lifetime of Rav Papa, Huna fell desperately ill, but his life was spared because he was forbearing.[11]
References
- Samson of Chinon, "Sefer Keritut," p. 26a, Cremona, 1558
- Kiddushin 32b
- Horayot 10b
- Ketuvot 85a; Gittin 73a
- Rosh Hashana 24b
- Eruvin 12a; Berachot 58b; et al.
- Berachot 57a
- Horayot 10b
- Shabbat 118b
- Pesachim 89b
- Rosh Hashana 17a
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Huna b. Joshua". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.