「Talmud」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Talmud

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  • Though the rabbis presented a defense of the Talmud, a commission of Christian theologians condemn
  • rankists and ordered the public burning of the Talmud, a sentence which was carried into effect in t
  • oaz Cohen (1899-1968) was a leading scholar of Talmud, a legal decisor (posek), and a professor at t
  • dom House halted publication of the Steinsaltz Talmud after less than one-third of the English trans
  • He was one of the four rabbis who defended the Talmud against Nicholas Donin in the public disputati
  • ation demanded that the four rabbis defend the Talmud against Donin's accusations that the Talmud wa
  • The disputation had four rabbis defending the Talmud against the accusations of a Franciscan Order
  • published an exact transcription of the Leiden Talmud along with carefully annotated corrections.
  • The Talmud also enumerates six occasions in which Akiva g
  • The Talmud also recounts a more positive view of Balaam,
  • The Leiden Jerusalem Talmud also known as the Leiden Talmud is a medieval
  • shel Torah (1891), guide to the theory of the Talmud and to the fundamental principles of the Halak
  • eib Merkin Distinguished Professorial Chair in Talmud and Jewish Philosophy
  • ion in rabbinic theology, of the literature of Talmud and Midrash, made him one of the few experts i
  • ll, with an outstanding knowledge of Bible and Talmud, and to have spoken 39 languages.
  • After having studied Talmud and rabbinics under his uncle R. Zvi and Shlom
  • left the Levant before the canonization of the Talmud and therefore had no way of being Rabbinic Jew
  • manuscripts, including novellae on most of the Talmud and hundreds of responsa, whose whereabouts ar
  • participated in the Soncino translation of the Talmud and Midrash..
  • Torah, in the highest class of which he taught Talmud and Jewish philosophy.
  • Main articles: Jesus in the Talmud and Celsus
  • uld see Rabbi Moshe Dovid totally engrossed in Talmud, and writing his thoughts.
  • tly the senior editor of the English Artscroll Talmud, and teaches the highest level class in the Be
  • Gemara ("Completion") from both the Jerusalem Talmud and the Babylonian Talmud.
  • has two meanings, according to the Babylonian Talmud and the Jerusalem Talmud.
  • Halakha and Aggadah is cited in the Jerusalem Talmud and the Midrash, and very few is cited in the
  • uch for halachic decisions, rather than on the Talmud and the Geonim.
  • ges of his time, able to quote from the entire Talmud and its commentaries from memory.
  • He is cited in the Jerusalem Talmud and the Midrash merely as R. Jose.
  • The Talmud and later commentaries reflect a substantial a
  • Shamma Friedman, Professor of Talmud and Rabbinics at The Jewish Theological Semina
  • , H.L.; Stemberger (1991), Introduction to the Talmud and Midrash, Edinburgh: T&T Clark, ISBN 978-08
  • nd prolific writer, from studies of the Torah, Talmud and mysticism to introductory pamphlets on Jew
  • , H.L.; Stemberger (1991), Introduction to the Talmud and Midrash, Edinburgh: T&T Clark, ISBN 978-08
  • pler, more straightforward teaching method for Talmud and the Bible.
  • He worked intensely on the Talmud and contributed no less than 190 papers to Cha
  • He studied Talmud and rabbinics throughout his youth under the t
  • re, at the same time continuing his studies in Talmud and Jewish science.
  • eld wrote scholarly commentaries on the Torah, Talmud, and Shulchan Aruch.
  • when the apostate Nicholas Donin assailed the Talmud and appealed to Pope Gregory IX to order its d
  • f three most prominent Segans are noted on the Talmud and on Josephus Flavius' work: Hanina Segan ha
  • munity in the years after the redaction of the Talmud and continuing until the Gaonic era.
  • Maharsha explains the discrepancy between the Talmud and Josephus by stating that Honi was "presume
  • At thirteen he had mastered the Talmud, and at fifteen, the Kabbalistic works of the
  • n-in-law of Abraham Rosanes I. His teachers in Talmud and rabbinics were Samuel ha-Levi and Joseph d
  • d to have had an encyclopedic knowledge of the Talmud and Bible, Rabbi Juzint was also poet and auth
  • ers, and in his youth became familiar with the Talmud and rabbinical literature, and with a resolute
  • of Eretz Yisrael, who relied on the Jerusalem Talmud and their own older traditions.
  • was rather free with regard to the text of the Talmud and the Midrashim.
  • scussions on halakic problems occurring in the Talmud and its commentaries (Salonica, 1581; Venice,
  • commentaries on biblical literature, Mishanah, Talmud and Halacha were publicized from his younger y
  • ysterious and Mythical Creatures of Scripture, Talmud and Midrash (Zoo Torah/Yashar Books 2006) ISBN
  • He was one of the arrangers of the Babylon Talmud and engaged in the processs of its completion.
  • To this end copies of the Rubaiyat (also the Talmud and Bible) are being compared to the code usin
  • or one of the four which are enumerated in the Talmud and the Mekilta.
  • hat “since it is not found in either Mishna or Talmud, and since we have no way of establishing whet
  • izrachi, miscellanies on various tracts of the Talmud, and four funeral orations.
  • erusalem with a concentration in the fields of Talmud and Jewish Thought.
  • authorship and composition of the Mishnah and Talmud, and in particular why earlier authorities are
  • e he teaches Kabbalah, Hasidic philosophy, and Talmud, and is the spiritual leader of Congregation B
  • the bulk of the Mishnah and Tosefta within the Talmud and by the Dead Sea Scrolls, notably the Bar K
  • ted the younger generation in the study of the Talmud and rabbinic literature, and he delivered serm
  • chasidic families, steeped in the study of the Talmud and its commentators.
  • memory, a pure mind, and was an expert in the Talmud and its commentaries.
  • th Chouchani, Levinas sees the ancient text of Talmud and its multiple layers of subsequent commenta
  • Some of his decisions conflict with the Talmud, and in his haggadic interpretations he did no
  • able surviving ziggurats, is identified in the Talmud and Arab culture with the Tower of Babel.
  • odified since the days of the Hebrew Bible and Talmud and proceeds from the tithes are no longer giv
  • ed the JTS faculty in 1920 as an instructor in Talmud and went on to serve as an associate professor
  • scellanies on various tracts of the Babylonian Talmud, and on Maimonides' Yad ha-qazaqah (Leghorn, 1
  • In 1925, he was appointed an instructor of Talmud, and went on to serve on the JTS faculty for f
  • ing his career he published extensively on the Talmud and Jewish law, while also authoring many comp
  • The Talmud and the Jews).
  • He was a close student of the Talmud, and also of the Greek and later German philos
  • ief works were legal notes and responsa on the Talmud and the Shulkhan Arukh.
  • His Methodology of the Talmud, and his marginal notes to the Yerushalmi, whi
  • out as a warning to the self-opinionated; the Talmud applying to him the motto of Nehorai: "Go to a
  • mram's rules concerning the methodology of the Talmud are of considerable value.
  • versity as professor and professor emeritus of Talmud, as well as chair of the Talmud department.
  • uch later, the name was used in the Babylonian Talmud as Kardunya, which designates modern day Iraqi
  • The traditional understanding was to view the Talmud as a unified homogeneous work.
  • ular world as in the Jewish, as at ease in the Talmud as in Shakespeare.
  • our sentences of this section are cited in the Talmud as being taken from a Baraita (B.
  • en Bavoi, for the acceptance of the Babylonian Talmud as the standard for Jewish law in all countrie
  • While other scholars had also treated the Talmud as a multi-layered work, Halivni's innovation
  • shal scrutinized the published editions of the Talmud as well as the commentaries of Rashi, Tosafot,
  • he son of a chazzan, he began the study of the Talmud at an early age, though not to the neglect of
  • A professor of Talmud at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Urbach
  • He received a B.A in Jewish History and Talmud at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • He later studied the Torah and Talmud at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem as well
  • He subsequently taught Talmud at Hebrew Theological College in Skokie, Illin
  • child prodigies and geniuses who mastered the Talmud at a tender age (such a person is known in Heb
  • In 1887 Blau became teacher of the Talmud at the Landesrabbinerschule, in 1888 substitut
  • h, Amud Yomi was created as a way to study the Talmud at a slower pace.
  • shiva in the spring of 2002 and began teaching Talmud at Yeshiva University and its affiliated RIETS
  • The Talmud attributes the prayer to Rabbi Yochanan in the
  • great work, A Dictionary of the Targumim, the Talmud Babli and Yerushalmi, and the Midrashic Litera
  • According to a negative view of Balaam in the Talmud, Balaam possessed the gift of being able to as
  • lmudic Law Is the law that is derived from the Talmud based on the teachings of the Talmudic Sages.
  • (Babylonian Talmud Bava Batra 15b.)
  • such as the Schottenstein edition of both the Talmud Bavli and Yerushalmi.
  • Talmud Bavli refers to one who recites it daily as pr
  • erroneously published in some editions of the Talmud Bavli as the Tosafos Ri HaZaken, an error note
  • "The term ... is not found in the Talmud Bavli, although the days referred to are menti
  • he finished editing the Gemara portion of the Talmud Bavli, completing the work of his teacher Rav
  • According to the Talmud, because Akiba broke the news gently, Eliezer
  • The idea for calendar-based learning of the Talmud began with Daf Yomi in 1923.
  • Verses 7-9 are part of Talmud Berachos 64a.
  • het and to save the nation from extermination ( Talmud, Berachot 7a).
  • (Babylonian Talmud Berakhot 32a.)
  • (Babylonian Talmud Berakhot 56b.)
  • , and the first and oldest complete set of the Talmud, between 1520 and 1523, a well-preserved copy
  • overed wide areas of Judaic studies, including Talmud, Bible, halachic literature - especially the p
  • He is an instructor of Talmud, Bible, and Jewish Law at the Mechina program
  • According to The Talmud, Birkat Ram is one of three underground spring
  • The Bible and Talmud both expound that Esther and Hadassah are the
  • rds "in Israel" appear in most versions of the Talmud, but not in others.
  • kenazi designed the Shittah to cover the whole Talmud; but only the following tracts were interprete
  • He has yet to publish any works on the Talmud, but many of his works have been published by
  • nded to refute the charges brought against the Talmud by the numerous Spanish converts.
  • p is the editor of three novellae on Torah and Talmud by his late father, the noted Rabbi Jechiel Mi
  • ement of Mosaic authorship is contained in the Talmud, c. 200-500, where the rabbis discuss exactly
  • He wrote a seven-volume commentary on the Talmud, called "Leflagos Reuven".
  • The Talmud cites him many times, and one can also find ot
  • The Talmud cites him as exceptionally scrupulous in his w
  • The Jerusalm Talmud cites an additional opinion, that Menahem agre
  • His Talmud classes reveal how each word of the Gemara and
  • Based on Rabbi Lichtenstein's Talmud classes at Yeshivat Har Etzion, his students'
  • secular home, prepared for his role by taking Talmud classes at the Hebrew University and spent eig
  • me of the first tosafot (additions) to Rashi's Talmud commentary, pulling out certain points in grea
  • Similarly, the theoretical opinions of earlier Talmud commentators were studied in a receptive, uncr
  • raim; hence the confusion that prevails in the Talmud concerning the identity of each of them, the s
  • d that "neither the Jewish prayer-book nor the Talmud contained anything derogatory to Christianity,
  • ound an enumeration of all the passages of the Talmud containing Abaye's name)
  • The Jerusalem Talmud contains a prayer he wrote and included in the
  • The Jerusalem Talmud covers all the tractates of Zeraim, while the
  • In the same year he began lecturing in the Talmud department at Bar-Ilan University.
  • HaTorah uses a unique methodology for studying Talmud developed by Rabbi Green.
  • At the middle of the second chapter, the Talmud discusses topics of ritual purity.
  • The Jewish Talmud distinguishes between two Magdalas only.
  • iel ever having taught in public, although the Talmud does describe Gamaliel as teaching a student w
  • ded-on anonymous annotations to the Babylonian Talmud, during the process of the Savora arrangement
  • n, with a focus on finishing a tractate of the Talmud each semester.
  • ter: By his cup, his capital and his choler;" ( Talmud, Eiruvin, 65b)
  • an is best known for his work as editor of the Talmud El Am (cf below).
  • Dr. Plaskow wrote that the Rabbis of the Talmud employed a Midrashic method in which "they rec
  • eaven, Altona, 1853, a reference to Babylonian Talmud, Eruvin 13a) on the laws pertaining to Torah s
  • (Babylonian Talmud Eruvin 19a).
  • His staements often are mentioned in the Talmud, especially in Order Kodashim.
  • r school of pietistic reading of the Bible and Talmud established, to the satisfaction of Jews in Pe
  • d in any of the holy documents (Old Testament, Talmud, etc.) and isn't at all used daily.
  • He was appointed lecturer in Talmud, ethics, and philosophy.
  • The Talmud even records that the constituents of the two
  • wrote a commentary on all the tractates of the Talmud except Berakot and Niddah (see Solomon Luria,
  • The sages of the Talmud explain that the satement of Rabbi Yannai was
  • The Babylonian Talmud explains that the word "afikoman" derives from
  • Germany to publish a 17-volume edition of the Talmud, financed by the Joint and German authorities.
  • "the completion of the Six Orders (of the Talmud)") is the celebration of the completion of the
  • This is about part of the Talmud; for the Jewish festival whose name is the plu
  • This is about part of the Talmud; for the Jewish day of rest, see Shabbat.
  • mals by Christians, as the reason given in the Talmud for forbidding the slaughtering of animals by
  • high priest (Yehoshua ben Gamla), known in the Talmud for his campaign to establish yeshivas through
  • These precepts and their interpretation in the Talmud form the basis for any rules regarding convert
  • Hauptman received a degree in Talmud from the Seminary College of Jewish Studies at
  • also been found in a fragment of the Jerusalem Talmud from the Cairo Genizah, a depository for holy
  • Pollak, in transferring the study of the Talmud from Germany, where it had been almost entirel
  • The rabbis of the Talmud gave no reason for the prohibition, but later
  • ( Talmud Gittin 56a.)
  • The earlier Jerusalem Talmud gives the subject of these stories as Aquila,
  • sion of the majority (though, according to the Talmud, God, a tree, a nearby stream, and the walls o
  • 7 - October 4, 2001) was a renowned scholar of Talmud, Halakha and a Rosh Yeshiva; known especially
  • The Jerusalem Talmud has preserved only one anecdote of his in the
  • The influence of the Babylonian Talmud has been far greater than that of the Yerushal
  • The Jerusalem Talmud has a greater focus on the Land of Israel and
  • rom and referring to passages in the Bible and Talmud has won him numerous fans and made him somethi
  • The Jerusalem Talmud has a Gemara on each of the tractates, while i
  • Over 2 million volumes of the Steinsaltz Talmud have been distributed to date.
  • Many of his lectures on Talmud have been posthumously published by his childr
  • Besides tosafot on the greater part of the Talmud, he wrote a Biblical commentary marked by cons
  • as an exposition and explanation of the Torah, Talmud hermeneutics includes also the rules by which
  • d Beit Hillel have hundreds of disputes in the Talmud, Hillel and Shammai themselves only have three
  • and Baraitas' portions that are quoted in the Talmud his name is mentioned many times.
  • As he had a thorough knowledge of the Talmud, his decisions were often sought in halakic ca
  • most important book was the three volume set, Talmud i evrei (trans.,
  • Rabbi Luban began publishing his original Talmud ideas while a student at RSA.
  • He believed, that the ethics of the Talmud, if properly understood, is closely related to
  • he oldest complete manuscript of the Jerusalem Talmud in the world.
  • These lare explained in the Babylonian Talmud in the tractate temurah, in order of Kodshim.
  • entire halakhic and practical material of the Talmud in a codified form, and seems to represent the
  • ed his Hebrew edition of the entire Babylonian Talmud in November 2010, at which time Koren Publishe
  • ns include Sholom Kamenetsky, an instructor of Talmud in the Talmudical Yeshiva of Philadelphia, Avr
  • part of the expense of printing the Babylonian Talmud in Frankfurt-am-Main in 1712-22; this excellen
  • panding upon the Old Testament is found in the Talmud, in the Koran, and in other late antique texts
  • s a gifted French rabbi and commentator on the Talmud in the eleventh to twelfth century, best known
  • The Talmud in Sukkah 28a tells that while he was absorbed
  • bbah, Pesikta de-Rav Kahana, and the Jerusalem Talmud, in addition to other ancient sources.
  • known for his ability to present topics in the Talmud in a broader context.
  • The Steinsaltz editions of the Talmud include translation from the original Aramaic
  • The Seder Olam (xx.), however, and the Talmud, include Baruch among the Prophets, and state
  • rk with insightful commentary on the Torah and Talmud, including grammatical observations on the Heb
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