The Mishnah is a collection of Halakah, legal
rules, compiled in the 2nd century. Other than the Old Testament, it is
the earliest surviving Jewish law code. The Babylonian Talmud consists
of the Mishnah plus
extensive commentary, apparently representing arguments about the
Mishnah occurring in the Babylonian Academies in the third through
fifth centuries. The Mishneh Torah is a treatise on the law based on
the Talmud,
written in the 12th century by Maimonides.
You are going to read selections from the three
sources, starting with Maimonides for reasons that may become obvious.
Your
assignment
is:
Read at least fifty pages from books XI, XII, or
XIII
of the Mishneh Torah (on reserve in the library). Read at least ten
pages from a section of the Mishnah that covers some of what you have
just read in Maimonides. Read at least five pages from a section of the
Talmud that includes some of what you have just read in the Mishnah. In
selecting sections to read, you can either choose one of the suggested
readings below, or:
First look
at the table of contents of the Mishneh Torah in order to decide what
subject or subjects
you want to read about. Then look through the translation of the
Mishnah on
reserve in the library, or one of the webbed partial translations
listed below, to locate a chunk corresponding to some part of what you
have just read. You may find it helpful to look
at the introduction to the volume of Maimonides you read from to find
information about what parts of the Mishnah it is based on.
Then look through the volumes of the Talmud on
reserve
in the library, or translations online, to find a chunk corresponding
to that part of the Mishnah--it will actually quote the Mishnah passage
in question. This approach is more work but will give you a broader
picture of the sources and let you choose material of particular
interest to you.
The objective is to get some feel for the nature
of three of the principal sources of Jewish law. Be prepared to discuss
what you have read in class and, if appropriate, its relation to modern
American law on the same subject.
Examples:
Maimonides: Mishneh
Torah |
Mishnah |
Talmud |
|||
Book |
Treatise |
Subject |
Pages |
||
XI |
1 |
Tort Damages |
3-57 |
Baba Qama |
Baba Qama |
XII |
1 |
Sales |
3-106 |
Bava Metzia, Bava Batra |
Bava Metzia Bava Batra |
XII |
3 |
Neighbors |
159-206 |
Bava Batra, Bava Metzia | Bava Metzia Bava Batra |
XIII |
1 |
Hiring |
3-51 |
Bava Metzia | Bava Metzia |
XIII |
3 |
Loans |
77-163 |
Bava Metzia | Bava Metzia |
XIII |
5 |
Inheritance |
259-294 |
Bava Batra | Bava Batra |
Webbed Source Material:
Mishnah: Danby
translation (book preview), Neusner
translation (Google Books), Another
webbed partial translation. Another.
Talmud: Webbed partial translation.
Books
5-9
are
the
sources
for
most of Maimonides Books XI-XIII.
Sources for Maimonides' Mishneh Torah
Printed volumes on reserve (as of Thursday, 3/25), along with
Mishnah and Torah.
Webbed
in English by Chabad.org