Unreferenced date December 2009 This page is about Kodashim, a section of the mishnah. See Kedoshim parsha for the Torah portion by that name. Kodashim or Qodhashim Hebrew language Hebrew , Holy Things is the fifth Order in the Mishna also the Tosefta and Talmud . Of the six Orders of the Mishna, it is the third longest. Kodoshim deals largely with the religious service within the Temple in Jerusalem , the Korbanot sacrificial offerings , and other subjects considered or related to these Holy Things . Kodoshim consists of 11 Mishnah tractates Zevahim , Sacrifices Deals with the procedure of animal and bird offerings. 14 chapters. Menahot , Meal Offerings Deals with the various grain based offerings in the Temple. 13 chapters. Chullin or Hullin , Ordinary Things Deals with the laws of slaughter and meat consumption i.e. animals used for every day as opposed to sacred reasons . 12 chapters. Bekhorot , Firstborn Deals with the sanctification and redemption of animal and human firstborns. 9 chapters. Arakhin , Dedications Deals mainly with a person dedicating their value to the Temple or dedicating a field. 9 chapters. Temurah Talmud Temurah , Substitution Outlines the laws of what happens if an animal is substituted for an animal dedicated for a sacrifice. 7 chapters. Keritot , Excisions Deals with the commandments for which the penalty is karet spiritual excision as well as the sacrifices associated with their mostly unwitting transgression. 6 chapters. Me ilah , Sacrilege Deals with the laws of restitution for the misappropriation of Temple property. 6 chapters. Tamid , Always Outlines the procedure of the Tamid daily sacrifice . 6 chapters. Middot tractate Middot , Measurements Describes the measurements of the second Temple. 4 chapters. Kinnim , Nests Deals with the complex laws for situations where the mixing ... he hu T mid nl Kodasjiem nn Mass khet Tam d pl Kodaszim pt Kodashim ru yi ... more details
Unreferenced date February 2007 Middot lit. Measurements is the tenth Mishna hic tractate of the Kodashim Order of Kodashim . It has no Gemara either in the Jerusalem Talmud or the Babylonian Talmud . The tractate deals with the measurements of the Second Temple in Jerusalem. Mishnah Judaism stub he hu Midd t nl Midot yi ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Arakhin Arachin vows of the value of a person is the fifth tractate in Seder Kodashim holies . Only chapters 1 6 based on Leviticus 27 1 8, deals with the vows of donating one s prescribed value as part of the dedication to the Temple, as well as other gifts to bedek habayis , or the treasury of the Temple. Chapters 7 8 explain the redemption from the Temple of a field one has inherited as derived from Leviticus 27 16 25. The chapter 8 addresses the devoted thing from Leviticus 27 28 29, while the last chapter deals with the laws of ancestral fields and houses in walled cities, in a walled city, and how they are redeemed based on the Leviticus 25 25 34. Mishna Judaism stub he nl Arachien yi ... more details
Bekhorot Hebrew , First born refers to the first born human, or animal according to the Hebrew Bible in which God commanded Moses in the Book of Exodus to consecrate to Me every first born man and beast, the first issue of every womb among the Israelites is Mine. ref cite book title Exod.13 2 ref It is from this commandment that Judaism forms the foundation of its many traditions and rituals concerning the redemption of the first born son and ritual slaughter . In addition to several references found in the Hebrew bible, Bekhorot is considered a Seder Kodashim Hebrew , or Holy Thing hence it is found under the fifth order of the Mishnah titled Kodashim , tractate four, Bekhorot. ref cite book title The Jewish Encyclopedia year New ed. Vol. II publisher Funk and Wagnalls Company pages 649 650 ref The primary focus of the tractate relates to the ritual sacrifice, or slaughter, of the first born of both human and animal. ref cite book title Encyclopaedia Judaica year 2nd Ed., Vol III. publisher MacMillan Reference USA ref An exemption is made for the first born son through the ritual of redemption in which the son is redeemed from the Kohen for the traditional sum of five shekels of silver ch.vii . ref cite book title The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion year 1997 publisher Oxford University Press ref Donkeys must also be redeemed from the Kohen, or killed ch. i . However, according to the Kodashim, all other first born animals calf, lamb, or kid , pending priestly inspection of purity, must be sacrificed to God or presented as a gift to the Kohen ch. ii vi . ref cite book title Ibid. ref Priests were required to inspect the first born for blemishes prior to consecration. These blemishes are enumerated in both the Mishnah and Tosefta . The Tosefta, very similar in function and chapter placement to the Mishnah, differs in its enumeration of the blemishes and their names. ref cite book title The Jewish Encyclopedia year New ed., Vol. II. publisher Fun ... more details
BLP sources date January 2011 Image Rav AY.jpg 200px right thumb Rabbi Avrohom Yehoshua Soloveitchik. File Yeshivas Brisk, Jerusalem.jpg 175px left thumb Facade of Yeshivas Brisk, Jerusalem. Rabbi Avrohom Yehoshua Soloveitchik sometimes Avraham is the rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Brisk , one of the Brisk tradition and Soloveitchik dynasty Brisk yeshivas in Jerusalem , Israel that admits only a select few elite Talmud ic students from the United States. ref cite news title Harvard of the Haredim url http www.haaretz.com general harvard of the haredim 1.148519 accessdate 26 January 2011 newspaper Haaretz date 28 January 2005 author Micha Odenheimer ref ref cite news title Still wrestling with haredi conscription url http pqasb.pqarchiver.com jpost access 53864123.html?dids 53864123 53864123&FMT ABS&FMTS ABS FT&date May 12, 2000&author Herb Keinon&pub Jerusalem Post&desc Still wrestling with haredi conscription&pqatl google accessdate 26 January 2011 newspaper Jerusalem Post date 12 May 2000 author Herb Keinon page 5B quote These people such as Brisk Yeshiva head Rabbi Avraham Yehoshua Soloveitchik are also... ref The Talmudic college has approximately 800 students. The school focuses on Kodashim , the Talmudic Seder dealing with sacrificial offerings. He is carrying on the tradition of his grandfather, Rabbi Yitzchok Zev Soloveitchik , who was known as the Brisker Rov . citation needed date January 2011 Family tree Brisker Family Tree References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Soloveitchik, Avrohom Yehoshua ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Soloveitchik, Avrohom Yehoshua Category Rosh yeshivas Category Israeli Orthodox rabbis Category Haredi rabbis in Israel Category Year of birth missing living people Category Living people rabbi stub ... more details
Infobox Paranormalcreatures Creature Name Bar Juchne Image Name Image Caption Grouping Local legend Sub Grouping Bird AKA Country Middle East Region Uncertain Habitat Uncertain First Reported The Talmud Last Sighted Status Local Legend Bar Juchne or Bar Yuchnei is a colossal legendary bird from Jewish mythology which was believed to have a wingspan large enough to block out the sun. The first mention of the creature comes from the Talmud Kodashim Bekhorot , fol. 57 col. 2 ref name hershon A Talmudic Miscellany , trans Paul Isaac Hershon, Routledge, 2001, ISBN 0415244587 http books.google.co.uk books?id hZMmqwFjplwC&pg PT234&lpg PT234&dq 22Bar Yuchnei 22&source web&ots tZ2FEdcfea&sig 8zRyAYbdEkzEAIABmdhHyYDFPTw&hl en&sa X&oi book result&resnum 2&ct result Google Books ref which tells of a Bar Juchne egg falling from its nest and destroying 300 cedars and flooding 60 villages cities. ref Encyclop dia metropolitana , FA Cox, Griffin, 1852 http books.google.co.uk books?id f0IAAAAQAAJ&pg PA427&dq 22Bar Juchne 22&client firefox a Google Books ref The Talmud says of the event The question therefore arose, Does the bird generally throw out its eggs? Rav Ashi replied, No that was a rotten one. ref name hershon It is said that it would be roasted, along with Leviathan and Behemoth , and served at a banquet for the Children of Israel at the coming of the Messiah . ref The Classical Journal , Vol XVI, Sep Dec 1817, London http books.google.co.uk books?id W3ISAAAAIAAJ&pg PA92&dq 22Bar Juchne 22&client firefox a PPA92,M1 Google Books ref See also Angha Roc mythology Roc Thunderbird mythology Thunderbird Zig Judaism Zig Ziz References reflist External links http www.unknownexplorers.com barjuchne.php www.unknownexplorers.com http www.sacred texts.com jud hl hl45.htm LX Cryptozoology stub Category Legendary birds Category Jewish legendary creatures ... more details
Eras of the Halakha Judah b. Hiyya ref name JEref http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 631&letter J JUDAH B. IYYA , jewishencyclopedia.com Article ref or Judah be rabbi ref name JEref or Yehudah b. Hiyya ref http www.joshua parker.net sages result.php?sage id 099 Yehudah b. Hiyya , sages of the talmud ref Hebrew or was a Jewish Amora sage of the Land of Israel , during the transitional period between the Tannaim Tanna ic and Amora ic eras. He was the son of Hiyya the Great R. Hiyya and his wife Judith, and the twin brother of Hezekiah Amora Hezekiah . His staements often are mentioned in the Talmud , especially in Order Kodashim . ref Cited in Tractate Sanhedrin Talmud Sanhedrin , 37b Tractate Zebahim, 11b, 19a, and 25a Tractate Menahoth, 10b and 26a ref Come of age he married the daughter of Rabbi Yannai . After he married, he went to study at a Beth midrash all week, and would return home every Sabbath eve, where a pillar of light moving before him. One of these times, he was so attracted by his subject of study that he had forgotten to return home, in order to perform his marital duties, the commandment of onah . When his Father in law, Rabbi Yannai, heard about it he said he must be dead, since if he were to be alive he would not have neglected the performance of his marital duties. The sages of the Talmud explain that the satement of Rabbi Yannai was font face Georgia like an error that proceedeth from the ruler font , namely, The words of a Tzadik must come true even if he didn t intend them to be, and indeed Judah his son in law died. ref Babylon Talmud , Tractate Kethuboth, 62b ref External links http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 631&letter J JUDAH B. IYYA , jewishencyclopedia.com Article References reflist Amoraim Category Talmud rabbis of the Land of Israel rabbi stub he ... more details
Eras of the Halakha You might be looking for Rebbe Nachman of Breslov . Rav Nachman bar Yaakov lang he died 320 was a Judaism Jewish Talmud ist who lived in Babylonia , known as an Amora of the third generation, and pupil of Samuel of Nehardea . He was chief justice of the Jews who were subject to the exilarch the political head of the Babylonian Jewish community , and was also head of the school of Nehardea . On the destruction of that town, he transferred his pupils to Shekan ib . His marriage with the daughter of the wealthy exilarch enabled him to live in luxury and to entertain scholars and strangers lavishly. Thus Rav Isaac of Palestine , who visited Babylon , stayed at Rav Nachman s house and enjoyed his hospitality. When the guest, upon leaving, was asked by his host to bless him, the former answered with the beautiful parable of the tree which sheltered the weary traveler beneath its shade and fed him with its fruit, so that the grateful wanderer blessed it with the words, May thy scions be like unto thee. And I, added Rav Isaac, can bless you, who are blessed with material and spiritual wealth, only with the prayer that your scions too may be like you Ta anit Talmud Ta anit 5b 6a . Rav Nachman used many collections of aggadot Berakhot Talmud Berakhot 23b . He was fond of collecting in one passage a number of Aramaic language Aramaic aphorisms see Yoma 28b 29a , and used sturdy popular expressions in his speech Kodashim Chullin 12a, 172a Ta anit 24a . His haggadic remarks relating to Bible Biblical personages were likewise made in this style, as the following specimens show blockquote It is not seemly for women to be conceited the two prophetesses Deborah and Huldah had hateful names, namely, bee and weasel Megillah Talmud Megillah 14b . blockquote blockquote Shamelessness avails even in the face of Heaven for God allowed Balaam to make the journey to Balak after He had forbidden it In the original, ... more details
Aaron Samuel ben Israel Kaidanover 1614 in Vilna December 1, 1676 in Chmielnik Hebrew was a Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Polish Lithuanian rabbi. Among his teachers were Jacob Hoeschel and his son Joshua Hoeschel . Biography During the Khmelnytsky Uprising 1648 1649 the Cossacks plundered Kaidanover s possessions, his valuable library and his manuscripts among them, and killed his two little daughters, and he arrived in Moravia an impoverished fugitive. He was elected rabbi successively of Langenlois in Lower Austria , Mikulov Nikolsburg , G og w Glogau , F rth , and Frankfurt Frankfurt am Main , and then returned to Poland , in 1671 to become the rabbi of Krak w Cracow ref name KlilatYofi a position he held until his death on December 1 1676 while attending the Vaad HaGalil of Krakow that took place in Chmielnik ref name KlilatYofi cite book author Haim Nathan Dembitzer title Klilat Yofi year 1888 1893 publisher Y. Fisher location Krakow , Poland oclc 122773481 nopp true page Vol. II, 71a ref Michael but Chaim Joseph David Azulai Azulai and Horovitz give 1679 see bibliography . Works He wrote Birkat ha Zeba , annotations to the Talmudical tractates of Kodashim except Hullin and Bekorot , with a preface in which he narrated the remarkable events of his life edited by his son in law Nahum Kohen, brother of Shabbethai Kohen , Amsterdam, 1669 another edition, with the commentary Omer Man, appeared at Berlin? in 1773 . Birkat Shemuel, derashot on the Pentateuch , partly kabbalistic , with additions by his son Zevi Hirsch , its editor Frankfort on the Main, 1682 Emunat Shemuel, sixty responsa on matrimonial cases, edited by his son ib. 1683 Tiferet Shemuel, novell to various Talmudic tractates, also edited by his son ib. 1692 . The annotations to Hoshen Mishpat contained in the last named work were printed in Ture Zahav Hamburg, 1692 . Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Chaim Joseph David Azulai Azulai , Shem ha Gedolim, i. 124b, Warsaw, 1876 Ben ... more details
Infobox Album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Masada Het Type Album Longtype Artist John Zorn Cover Masada Het.jpg Cover size Caption Released 1997 Recorded August 1, 1996 Genre Jazz Length 60 17 Language Label DIW Records DIW Director Producer John Zorn and Kazunori Sugiyama Chronology Masada Last album Masada Zayin br 1996 This album Masada Het br 1997 Next album Masada Tet br 1997 Misc Extra chronology Artist John Zorn Type Album Last album Filmworks VI 1996 br 1996 This album Masada Het br 1997 Next album Masada Tet br 1997 Masada Het , also known as Masada 8 , is a 1997 album by United States American composer and Saxophone saxophonist John Zorn released on the Japanese DIW Records DIW label. It is the eighth album of Masada band Masada recordings. Reception The Allmusic review by Don Snowden awarded the album 4 stars stating Het isn t spectacular Masada full of fireworks, but there s plenty of that around this is just a very good, solid disc packed with strong performances and material . ref name Allmusic Snowden, D. http www.allmusic.com album masada vol 8 het r352039 review Allmusic Review accessed July 26, 2011 ref Album ratings rev1 Allmusic rev1Score rating 4 5 ref name Allmusic Track listing All compositions by John Zorn. Schechem 11 25 Elilah 4 38 Kodashim 4 40 Halom 2 00 Ne eman 9 56 Abed Nego 7 14 Tohorot 4 39 Mochin 6 37 Amarim 4 28 Khebar 4 40 Recorded at Avatar, New York City on August 1, 1996 Personnel John Zorn alto saxophone Dave Douglas trumpeter Dave Douglas trumpet Greg Cohen Double bass bass Joey Baron Drum kit drums References reflist Category 1997 albums Category Masada albums Category Albums produced by John Zorn Category DIW Records albums fr Het album ... more details
selfref For the Wikipedia editing policy, see Wikipedia AR . wiktionary tocright AR , Ar or ar may refer to The letter R Computing Abandonia Reloaded , a freeware games web community Accelerated Reader , educational reading assessment software AccurateRip , data verification technology for compact disc ripping supported by Exact Audio Copy via a plugin Action Replay , video game device Activation record , a computer science term for the set of data regarding an active subroutine, stored within the stack Air Rivals , a MMORPG FPS, the new Space Cowboy Alternate Reality , a primary racial trait in the 4X strategy computer game Stars Armadillo Run , a physics based, independently developed computer game ar Unix , a Unix archive format and handling tool Augmented reality , an application of virtual reality in the real world Culture American Revolution Animal rights Argent , the heraldic tincture of silver Repair Ship, a U.S. Navy hull classification symbol rune of the Younger Futhark Ar., an abbreviation related to Kodashim Media Music Abbey Road Studios , a recording studio Abbey Road , the eleventh album by The Beatles A&R a part of the music industry Artist and repertoire Atlantic Records A.R Rahman , Indian singer and music composer Fiction Alex Rider , a fictional character and book series by author Anthony Horowitz Alternate reality , fictional concept Ar, largest city on the fictional planet Gor , in the novel series by John Norman Arlesdale Railway , a fictional railway in the Railway Series by W.V. Awdry Karan Singh Grover Armaan and Jennifer Winget Riddhima , two lovebirds of the youthful show Dill Mill Gayye Places .ar , the ccTLD for Argentina Argentina Arkansas , United States Ar city , ancient Moab Appenzell Outer Rhodes , Switzerland Province of Arezzo , Italy Arad County , Romania Arunachal Pradesh , a state in north eastern India Publications Architectural Review , a publication of contemporary architecture Arizona Republic , a newspaper published in ... more details
Eras of the Halakha Yochanan ben Nuri Hebrew was a tannaim tanna of the 1st and 2nd centuries, studied under the watch of Rabban Gamaliel II Gamliel of Yavne and senior of Akiba Sifra , edoshim , iv. 9 Kodashim Ar. 16b comp. Sifre , Deut. 1 . A great halakist , always provided with satisfactory answers to all questions, he was familiarly called pedler s basket or bundle of halakot Ab. R. N. xviii. Gi . 67a the number and diversity of halakot cited under his name in the Mishnah alone, about 40, justify those appellations. Besides exhaustive rabbinical knowledge, he acquired familiarity with the general science of his time, especially geometry . It was said of him, as of his colleague Eleazar ben isma , that he could approximately state the number of drops contained in the sea like Eleazar, also, he was very poor. Through the influence of Joshua ben Hananiah both were appointed by Gamaliel to remunerative offices comp. Sifre , Deut. 16 . Johanan showed himself grateful to Gamaliel. When, after that patriarch s death, Joshua proposed a change in a rule established by Gamaliel, Johanan opposed him I have observed that the head is always followed by the trunk as long as Gamaliel lived we observed the rule laid down by him, and now you propose to veto his directions. Joshua, we shall not harken to thee Moed Er. 41a . Between him and alafta also intimate scholarly relations existed comp. Tosef. , Bava Batra B. B. ii. 10 with Bava Batra B. B. 56b and parallels . In his discussions of halakot Johanan considered expediency and economy as well as law and authority. When arfon declared that only olive oil was appropriate for the Shabbat Sabbath lamp, Johanan became impatient And what shall the Jews of Babylonia Babylonians do where none but sesame oil is to be had and what shall the Medians do, who have nothing but nut oil and the Alexandrians, who have nothing but radish oil or the Cappadocians, who have only naphtha? Shab. 26a . On another occasion, when Aki ... more details
, dealing with civil and criminal law, the functioning of the courts and oaths 10 tractates , Kodashim ... of civil law saves people from each other. Wisdom refers to order Kodashim Holy Things and knowledge ... Kodashim Holy things , regarding sacrificial rites, the Temple in Jerusalem Temple , and the Kashrut ... and Kodashim . Using the text itself and various halachic rulings, Ginsburg finds hidden meaning ... 9671 Nezikin , http hebrewbooks.org 9672 Kodashim , http hebrewbooks.org 9673 Taharoth ... contain the complete text of Kehati in English for Moed, Nashim, Nezikin, and about half of Kodashim ... more details
Eras of the Halakha Rabbi Haninah ben Teradion or Hananiah ben Teradion Hebrew was a teacher in the third Tannaim Tannaitic generation 2nd century . He was a contemporary of Eleazar ben Perata I and of Halafta , together with whom he established certain ritualistic rules Ta anit Talmud Ta anit ii. 5 . He was one of the Ten Martyrs murdered by the Roman Empire Romans for ignoring the ban on teaching Torah . Life and work His residence was at Siknin, where he directed religious affairs as well as a school. The latter came to be numbered among the distinguished academies with reference to which a baraita says The saying Deuteronomy 16 20 , That which is altogether just shalt thou follow may be construed, Follow the sages in their respective academies. ... Follow Rabbi Haninah ben Teradion in Siknin Sanhedrin Talmud Sanhedrin 32b . Haninah administered the communal charity funds, and so scrupulous was he in that office that once when money of his own, designed for personal use on Purim , chanced to get mixed with the charity funds, he distributed the whole amount among the poor. Eleazar ben Jacob II so admired Haninah s honesty that he remarked, No one ought to contribute to the charity treasury unless its administrator is like Haninah ben Teradion Bava Batra 10b Avodah Zarah 17b . Comparatively few halakot are preserved from him Ta anit ii. 5, 16b Rosh Hashanah Talmud Rosh Hashanah 27a Tosefta , Mi . vi. 3 see also Yoma 78b Kodashim Menachot 54a . Haninah ingeniously proved that the Shekhinah rests on those who study the Law Avodah Zarah iii. 2 . Martyrdom Haninah s life proved that with him these were not empty words. During the Hadrian ic persecutions decrees were promulgated imposing the most rigorous penalties on the observers of the Jewish law, and especially upon those who occupied themselves with the promulgation of that law. Nevertheless, Hananiah conscientiously followed his chosen profession he convened public assemblies and taught Torah. Once ... more details