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Nakdimon
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A
The Roman authorities then
sent Vespasian Caesar against
the Jews.
He came
and
laid siege
to Jerusalem for
three years. There were
at that time
in
Jerusalem
these three wealthy people: Nakdimon ben Guryon, ben Kalba Savua, and ben Tzitzit HaKesat.
The Gemara explains their names:
Nakdimon ben Guryon
was called by that name
because the sun shined [
nakad
] on his behalf,
as it is related elsewhere (see
Ta’anit
19b) that the sun once continued to shine in order to prevent him from suffering a substantial loss…
Gittin 56a:8-9
§
The Sages taught: Once all the Jewish people ascended for
the
pilgrimage Festival to Jerusalem and there was not
enough
water for them to drink. Nakdimon ben Guryon,
one of the wealthy citizens of Jerusalem, went to
a certain
gentile
officer [
hegemon
]
and
said to him: Lend me twelve wells of water for the pilgrims, and I will give back to you twelve wells of water. And if I do not give
them
to you, I will give you twelve talents of silver. And
the officer
set him a time
limit for returning the water…
Taanit 19b:15-16
What were the origins of Rabbi Eliezer ben [Hyrcanus]? He was twenty-two [years old] and he had never studied Torah. One day [he said: I will go and study] Torah with Rabbi Yohanan ben Zakkai. His father, Hyrcanus, said to him: You will not eat until you have plowed a full plot of ground. He got up and plowed a full plot of ground. It is said that it was Friday, and so he went and ate with his father-in-law. But some say that he ate nothing from six hours before the Sabbath until six hours after the Sabbath…
Avot DeRabbi Natan 6:3
And if you wish, say
instead: If
she is accustomed
to wine,
she is given
wine, but not for drinking, rather
for
meat
pudding [
tzikei
],
made with wine, flour, and leftover meat
in a pot. As Rabbi Abbahu said
that
Rabbi Yoḥanan said: An incident
occurred
involving the daughter-in-law of Nakdimon ben Guryon,
whose husband had died.
The Sages apportioned for her
from his estate
two
se’a
of
wine for pudding, from one Shabbat eve to another…
Ketubot 65a:6
Apropos the daughter of Nakdimon ben Guryon, the Gemara relates what later became of her:
The Sages taught:
There was
an incident involving Rabban Yoḥanan ben Zakkai. When he was riding on a donkey and leaving Jerusalem, and his students were walking after him
to learn from him,
he saw a certain young woman who was gathering barley from among the dung of the animals of Arabs.
She was so poor that she subsisted on the undigested barley within the dung.
When she saw him, she wrapped herself in her hair,
as she had nothing else with which to cover herself…
Ketubot 66b:11
R. Yochanan b. Zakkai was once riding a donkey, his disciples walking behind, when he noticed a young girl gleaning barley-corn from under the hooves of the beasts of the Arabs. When she saw him, she covered herself with her hair, stood before him, and said to him: "My master, feed me." He asked: "Whose daughter are you?" She answered: "I am the daughter of Nakdimon ben Gurion. Do you not remember that you signed my
kethubah
?" R. Yochanan to his disciples: "I signed this one's
kethubah
, and I read 'one million golden dinars from her father's house…
Sifrei Devarim 305:3
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