For more than four centuries at the end of the ancient period, the rabbis compiled a large collection of Jewish laws and traditions and called it the Babylonian Talmud. These rabbis lived during the Sassanid dynasty (224-650 AD) and wrote the Talmud ...
For more than four centuries at the end of the ancient period, the rabbis compiled a large collection of Jewish laws and traditions and called it the Babylonian Talmud. These rabbis lived during the Sassanid dynasty (224-650 AD) and wrote the Talmud To this day, it has formed the basis of the normative behavior of the Jews and it was written by the rabbis who were one of the countless religious groups who lived in Babylon. During that period, Babylon was considered the heart and cultural, and administrative center of the Zoroastrian Empire of Iran. This geographical area, along with its surrounding areas, was full of religions, political movements, languages, and diverse ethnicities, all of which grew side by side. In this book, I intend to examine the Talmud in the shadow of its broader Sassanid theme and study its relationship with Iranian society and culture. The Iranian Empire as a real historical force and an imaginary audience, what effect did it have on the identity of the rabbis and Is their credit as stated in the Talmud?
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