Just about every Jewish temple does have at least one Torah if not two or three.
The Temple, the Torah-scroll, and the two stone tablets of the Ten Commandments.See also the Related Links.Link: More about Torah-scrollsLink: More about the first Torah-scrollLink: More about the Ten Commandments
A monarchy. Most of the people engaged in agriculture, but there were also many tradespeople and those who had crafts. In addition, almost everyone was learned in the Torah to some degree, and there was always a significant class of Sages and their Torah-learning students. They had courts consisting of tens of Torah scholars in every major town. The Holy Temple and its Cohanim were also an important presence.
They were the Prophets or Torah-sages of every generation, from Abraham to today.
Its origin is in the Holy Temple, as commanded in the Torah (Exodus ch.25).
The entire Torah is read over the course of each year, in consecutive portions every week. These are the Torah readings.
No. Sabbath is a Jewish festival that occurs on every Saturday. The teacher of the Torah was Moses.
Every hearth in a home is as sacred as a temple to Hestia.
Torah and Haftorah
The mitzva (Torah-precept) of pilgrimage existed during Temple times (that is, until about 1950 years ago). The Torah tells us (Deuteronomy ch.16 and elsewhere) to visit the Holy Temple three times a year, at the time of the three yearly festivals (which are enumerated there).
They went to the temple of Jerusalem at least three times each year, to worship the One God there, as commanded by the Torah (Deuteronomy ch.16).
As offerings can only be given when the Temple is standing, no offerings have been made since 70CE. As per the Torah, prayer replaces offerings when we are without the Temple.
Every Torah scroll in the world contains the same identical text.