Printing the Talmud: A History of the Individual Treatises Printed from 1700 to 1750

Printing the Talmud: A History of the Individual Treatises Printed

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Winner of the 1999 Association of Jewish Libraries Research and Special Libraries Division Award for Bibliographies. A scholarly study of the individual Talmudic tractates published in the first half of the eighteenth century. It describes more than one hundred Talmudic treatises that were not part of a complete Talmud and discusses their printers and the associated rabbis. The circumstances surrounding the publication of several treatises reflect the turbulence of Jewish history. The subject matter encompasses the activities of many small Hebrew print-shops in Central Europe, as well as major centers such as Amsterdam. More than one hundred and twenty-five reproductions of title and representative pages, many not previously reproduced, are included. The book, the only complete study on the subject in any language, addresses a lacuna in Hebrew history and bibliography. It is an important contribution to Hebrew bibliography and Jewish history.

Marvin J. Heller is the author of Printing the Talmud: A History of the Earliest Printed Editions of the Talmud (Brooklyn, 1992), and numerous articles on Hebrew bibliography and printing.

Author: Marvin Heller
Format: Hardback, 394 pages, 210mm x 290mm, 1390 g
Published: 1999, Brill, Netherlands
Genre: Non-Christian Religions

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Description

Winner of the 1999 Association of Jewish Libraries Research and Special Libraries Division Award for Bibliographies. A scholarly study of the individual Talmudic tractates published in the first half of the eighteenth century. It describes more than one hundred Talmudic treatises that were not part of a complete Talmud and discusses their printers and the associated rabbis. The circumstances surrounding the publication of several treatises reflect the turbulence of Jewish history. The subject matter encompasses the activities of many small Hebrew print-shops in Central Europe, as well as major centers such as Amsterdam. More than one hundred and twenty-five reproductions of title and representative pages, many not previously reproduced, are included. The book, the only complete study on the subject in any language, addresses a lacuna in Hebrew history and bibliography. It is an important contribution to Hebrew bibliography and Jewish history.

Marvin J. Heller is the author of Printing the Talmud: A History of the Earliest Printed Editions of the Talmud (Brooklyn, 1992), and numerous articles on Hebrew bibliography and printing.