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Talmud
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Talmud
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Talmud [Aramaic from Heb.,=learning], in Judaism, vast compilation of the Oral Law with rabbinical elucidations, elaborations, and commentaries, in contradistinction to the Scriptures or Written Laws. The Talmud is the accepted authority for Orthodox Jews everywhere. Its two divisions are the Mishna or text of the Oral Law (in Hebrew) and the Gemara (in Aramaic), a commentary on the Mishna, which it supplements. The Mishna is divided into six Orders (Sedarim) and comprises 63 tractates (Massektoth), only 36 1/2 of which have a Gemara. The redaction of the Mishna was completed under the auspices of Juda ha-Nasi, c.AD 200, who collected and codified the legal material that had accumulated through the exposition of the Law by the Scribes (Soferim), particularly Hillel and Shammai, and its elaboration by the Tannaim of the 1st and 2d cent. AD, particularly Akiba ben Joseph. The Gemara developed out of the interpretations of the Mishna by the Amoraim . Both the Palestinian and Babylonian schools produced Talmuds, known respectively as the Talmud Yerushalmi (compiled c.5th cent. AD) and the Talmud Babli (c.6th cent. AD). The Babylonian Talmud is longer and more comprehensive and sophisticated than the Talmud Yerushalmi. It became the authoritative work due in part to the predominance of Babylonian Jewry and the decline of the Palestinian community by the year 1000. The Talmud touches on a wide range of subjects, offering information and comment on astronomy, geography, historical lore, domestic relations, and folklore. The legal sections of the Talmud are known as the halakah ; the poetical digressions, illustrating the application of religious and ethical principles through parables, legends, allegories, tales, and anecdotes, constitute the Aggada. In the Middle Ages there arose a vast literature of commentaries on the Gemara—commentaries on those commentaries—and responsa (questions and answers); Rashi was one of the best-known commentators, and his commentaries are included in standard editions of the Talmud. In the Middle Ages thousands of Talmud manuscripts were destroyed by the Christians. The term Talmud is sometimes used to refer to the Gemara alone.
Bibliography: See The Babylonian Talmud (34 vol., tr. 1935-48); J. Goldin, The Living Talmud (1957, repr. 1964); H. L. Strack, Introduction to the Talmud and Midrash (1931, repr. 1969); C. G. Montefiore and H. Loewe, ed., A Rabbinic Anthology (1970); J. Neuser, Invitation to the Talmud (1973, repr. 1984); A. Steinsaltz, ed., The Talmud (Vol. I-XX, 1989-99) and The Essential Talmud (1992); D. H. Akenson, Surpassing Wonder: The Invention of the Bible and the Talmuds (1999).
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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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The Talmud
Jerusalem Post; 12/9/2005; BEREL WEIN; 759 words
; BEREL WEIN Jerusalem Post 12-09-2005 Headline: The Talmud Byline: BEREL WEIN Edition; Up Front Section: Features Page: 32 Friday, December 9, 2005 -- In its simplest form of definition, the Talmud is the record of centuries of discussion expounding the Oral Law of Judaism as it took place in the
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Richard Cohen and the Talmud
The Washington Post; 2/17/1990; David Golinkin; 1150 words
; I was pleased to learn from Richard Cohen's column {Magazine, Jan. 28} that he has read Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz's "new translation of the Talmud along with its reference guide." Unfortunately, most of the points in his column are based on misinformation or lack of knowledge. Since I have the pleasure
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Discovering the Talmud.
First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life; 8/1/1998; Chevlen, Eric M.; 3976 words
; Consider the book we are talking about. It is written in two foreign languages, one of which is native to but one small country, and the other now spoken nowhere on earth. It is the product of a minority culture within a vast and now crumbled empire. The text itself is ancient, handicapped by
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New Talmud Translation Published in Russia; First Edition Since Czarist Era Marks a Milestone in Reawakening of Jewish Traditions
The Washington Post; 2/14/1996; David Hoffman; 682 words
; For the first time since before the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, a volume of the Talmud, the central work of Jewish civilization, has been published in Russia in the Russian language. The translation, arrived here in the hands of a bearded scholar from Israel, Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, who has devoted
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Potomac shul to dedicate Talmud
Washington Jewish Week; 3/23/2006; Anonymous; 207 words
; Congregation B'nai Tzedek will hold a Talmud dedication ceremony this Sunday, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., to celebrate the presentation of the synagogue's first full edition of the Babylonian Talmud. This gift was a donation by congregants Nancy and Dalbert Ginsberg and family. To commemorate the gift,
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The Rabbi, Bringing Forth the Law; Adin Steinsaltz's 25-Year Quest to Translate The Talmud
The Washington Post; 4/27/1988; Jim Naughton; 2992 words
; "For me it was not anything like a conversion," the rabbi says, lighting his pipe. He is perched on the edge of a couch in the sitting room of a Georgetown town house. "In college I studied mathematics," he continues. "There is a theorem in plane geometry. It is called Desarges Theorem. You can't
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The Talmud: "Finis" to a translation
Chicago Jewish Star; 4/13/2000; Anonymous; 419 words
; The Talmud: "Finis" to a translation THE GOOD NEWS IS THAT after 11 years the English edition of the Babylonian ... been announced as officially completed as of April 19. The bad news is that the project is now finished - but the work is not complete ...
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The Talmud: the Steinsaltz Edition, vol. 1: Tractate Bava Metzia, part 1.
The Nation; 4/30/1990; Samuelson, Arthur H.; 2370 words
; Adin Steinsaltz is an Israeli scholar, rabbi, scientist, mystic and social critic who has created an innovative edition of the Talmud designed to make that book more accessible to those curious to sample its riches. Sporting a button that says Let My People Know, he has made it his personal mission
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Reading the Talmud With Postmodern Eyes
Forward; 3/18/1994; Benjamin Pollock; 1055 words
; Benjamin Pollock Forward 03-18-1994 Reading the Talmud With Postmodern Eyes. `I often wonder if we should take the Talmud so seriously," says Rabbi Shaye Cohen, professor of Jewish studies at Brown University. "Sometimes I think the rabbis are just enjoying themselves, exercising their minds with a
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The Talmud: the Steinsaltz Edition, a Reference Guide.
The Nation; 4/30/1990; Samuelson, Arthur H.; 1363 words
; I am not sure why Random House has chosen to call this The Talmud- The Steinsaltz Edition. The Israeli edition is called The Babylonian Talmud, which is its correct name, and Steinsaltz's name appears at the bottom in small print as translator, commentator and punctuator. Moreover, this is not a
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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Talmud
World Encyclopedia
Talmud Body of Jewish religious and civil laws and learned interpretations of their meanings. Study of the Talmud is central to Orthodox Judaism . The Talmud consists of two elements: the Mishna and the Gemara . The Mishna is the written version of a set ...
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Talmud Torah
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... the original oral Torah of Sinai, the Mishna , Midrash , and Talmuds . Talmud Torah is also the name given to an elementary school under ... auspices that places special emphasis on religious education. Talmud Torah Talmud Torah Talmud Torah
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Rashi
Encyclopedia of World Biography
... exegeses on the Old Testament and the Talmud. His commentaries are still important ... ambition of spending his life studying at Talmudic schools in Germany. After studies at Mainz ... Testament (except for a few books) and on the Talmud. These exegeses were received and read ...
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Amoraim
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... Mishna and other Tannaitic collections (see Talmud ). Serving as judges, communal administrators ... discussions constitute the section of the Talmud known as the Gemara. In addition, they ... or aggadic material that appears in the Talmud and in the Midrashim (see Midrash ). Bibliography ...
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Aha of Shabcha
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... questions], reflects both the Babylonian Talmud of his earlier years and the influence of the Palestinian Talmud, with which he became familiar at this ... after the close of the compilation of the Talmud of whom there is record. His work emphasizes ...
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