THE  JEWISH SANHEDRIN



          The ancient Jewish court system was called the Sanhedrin. The
Great Sanhedrin was the supreme religious body in Palestine during
the time of the Holy Temple. There were also smaller religious
Sanhedrins in every town in Palestine, as well as a civil political-
democratic Sanhedrin. These Sanhedrins existed until the
abolishment of the rabbinic patriarchate in about 425 C.E.

    The earliest record of a Sanhedrin is by Josephus who wrote of a
political Sanhedrin convened by the Romans in 57 B.C.E. Hellenistic
sources generally depict the Sanhedrin as a political and judicial
council headed by the country’s ruler.

    Tannaitic sources describe the Great Sanhedrin as a religious
assembly of 71 sages who met in the Chamber of Hewn Stones in the
Temple in Jerusalem. The Great Sanhedrin met daily during the
daytime, and did not meet on the Sabbath, festivals or festival eves. It
was the final authority on Jewish law and any scholar who went
against its decisions was put to death as a zaken mamre (rebellious
elder). The Sanhedrin was led by a president called the nasi (lit.
"prince") and a vice president called the av bet din (lit. "father of the
court"). The other 69 sages sat in a semicircle facing the leaders. It is
unclear whether the leaders included the high priest.

    The Sanhedrin judged accused lawbreakers, but could not initiate
arrests. It required a minimum of two witnesses to convict a suspect.
There were no attorneys. Instead, the accusing witness stated the
offense in the presence of the accused and the accused could call
witnesses on his own behalf. The court questioned the accused, the
accusers and the defense witnesses.

    The Great Sanhedrin dealt with religious and ritualistic Temple
matters, criminal matters appertaining to the secular court,
proceedings in connection with the discovery of a corpse, trials of
adulterous wives, tithes, preparation of Torah Scrolls for the king and
the Temple, drawing up the calendar and the solving of difficulties
relating to ritual law.

    In about 30 C.E., the Great Sanhedrin lost its authority to inflict
capital punishment. After the Temple was destroyed, so was the Great
Sanhedrin. A Sanhedrin in Yavneh took over many of its functions,
under the authority of Rabban Gamliel. The rabbis in the Sanhedrin
served as judges and attracted students who came to learn their oral
traditions and scriptural interpretations. From Yavneh, the Sanhedrin
moved to different cities in the Galilee, eventually ending up in
Tiberias.

    Local Sanhedrins consisted of different numbers of sages,
depending on the nature of the offenses it dealt with. For example,
only a Sanhedrin of 71 could judge a whole tribe, a false prophet or
the high priest. There were Sanhedrins of 23 for capital cases and of
three scholars to deal with civil or lesser criminal cases.

Sources:
The Jewish Virtual Library

                                           
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