
Amoraim - Wikipedia
Amoraim (Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: אמוראים [ʔamoraˈʔim], singular Amora אמורא [ʔamoˈra]; "those who say" or "those who speak over the people", or "spokesmen") [1] refers to Jewish …
Ancient Jewish History: Amoraim - Jewish Virtual Library
Amoraim (Aram. אָמוֹרָאִים) refers to scholars in the Land of Israel and Babylonia who succeeded the tannaim and preceded (in Babylonia) the savoraim and geonim. (See Table: Heads of …
Introducing the Amoraim - Chabad.org
Afterward, the leading Torah scholars were known as Amoraim, or interpreters, in contrast to Tannaim, the teachers of the Oral Law. For their part, the Amoraim explained the rulings of the …
Who Were the Tannaim and Amoraim? - My Jewish Learning
The Talmudic rabbis whose views are recorded in the Talmudic literature are called Tannaim and Amoraim. Both these terms are also found in the Talmud in connection with learning activity.
TANNAIM AND AMORAIM - JewishEncyclopedia.com
The term was first used in the Gemara to indicate a teacher mentioned in the Mishnah or in a baraita, in contradistinction to the later authorities, the Amoraim. Not all the teachers of the …
Amoraim - Encyclopedia.com
2018年5月21日 · Amoraim (ä´mōrä´Ĭm) [Heb. amar=to interpret], in Judaism, term referring to those scholars, predominantly at Caesarea and Tiberias in Palestine (c.AD 220–c.AD 375) …
The Amoraim - Chabad.org
5 天之前 · The Amoraim explained the rulings of the Tannaim, applying them to new situations, but never disagreeing with their teachers. As the community grew, Babylonian Jewry …
The Babylonian Talmud - Chabad.org
What Is the Babylonian Talmud? Based on the teachings of the Mishnah, Tosefta, and other earlier rabbinic works, the rabbis of Babylonia, known as Amoraim, accumulated generations …
AMORA - JewishEncyclopedia.com
Amoraim as Expounders of the Mishnah. A word signifying "the speaker," or "the interpreter," derived from the Hebrew and Aramaic verb amar ("to say," or "to speak"). It is used in the …
Amoraim - Infoplease
Amoraim äˈmōräˈĭm [key] [Heb. amar=to interpret], in Judaism, term referring to those scholars, predominantly at Caesarea and Tiberias in Palestine (c.a.d. 220–c.a.d. 375) and in Babylonia …
- 某些结果已被删除