Category
page 1Rabbinic literature

Talmud
thumb|The Talmud on display in the Jewish Museum of Switzerland brings together parts from the first two Talmud prints by [[Daniel Bomberg and Ambrosius Froben.|250x250px]]
Classic Rabbinic literature
Jewish literature attributed to the rabbis of the early periods (circa. 200 BCE - 700 CE)
Mikraot Gedolot
edition of the Tanakh with the classic Jewish commentaries
Megillat Taanit
ancient Jewish Text
Kitzur Shulchan Aruch
Jewish law book
Midrash Rabba
part of or the collective whole of specific aggadic midrashim on the books of the Torah and the Five Megillot
Hasid
Ḥasīd (, "pious", "saintly", "godly man"; plural "Hasidim") is a Jewish honorific, frequently used as a term of exceptional respect in the Talmudic and early medieval periods. It denotes a person who is scrupulous in his observance of Jewish law, and often one who goes beyond the legal requirements of ritual and ethical Jewish observance in daily life. In the Mishnah, the term is used thirteen times, the majority of which being in the Tractate Pirkei Avot.
Megillat Antiochus
Scroll about the story of Hanukkah
Talmudical tractate
one of the tractates of the Mishna, Tosephta or of the Babylonian or Jerusalem Talmud
Darkhei Moshe
work about Jewish law written by the polish rabbi Moses Isserles.
Seder Olam
Wikimedia disambiguation page
Maggid Meisharim
Book written by the Rabbi Joseph Karo.