When the academy entered upon a new period of prosperity, under
Rav Ashi, in the late 4th century, its seat was at Mata Mehasya, where Ashi lived. Most of the Talmudic references to this place, which Ashi says may not be called either a city or a borough, date from this time. Ashi refers to its synagogue, which strangers visited on his account, and he claims to have saved the town from destruction by prohibiting the construction of houses higher than the synagogue. Ashi was wont to say that the non-Jewish inhabitants of Mata Mehasya were hard-hearted, since they beheld the splendor of the Torah twice a year at the great Kallah assemblies, and yet not one of them was converted to Judaism. Halevy assumes that Sura again became the seat of the academy after Ashi's death, and that
Mar bar Rav Ashi restored Mata Mehasya to the position to which Ashi had raised it. From his time probably dates the maxim which the martyr Mashershaya gave his sons, contrasting the outward poverty of Mata Mehasya with the splendor of
Pumbedita: "Live on the dung-heaps of Mata Mehasya and not in the palaces of Pumbedita!" There were various differences of opinion between the scholars of Pumbedita and Mata Mehasya regarding questions of civil law. Ravina, the last amora of the Academy of Sura, lived at Mata Mehasya. The Talmud refers to the destruction of Mata Mehasya, but in post-Talmudic times the town lent its name to the Academy of Sura, as stated above. ==See also==