Ravina II, who had succeeded Ashi as …

Years: 472 - 483

Ravina II, who had succeeded Ashi as head of the school of Sura in Babylonia, completes the Talmud edition known as the Babylonian Gemara (Aramaic for "learning" or "tradition"), in 475.

A work of enormous scope, the “Talmud Babli,” as the Babylonian Talmud is known, is for traditional Jews the final authority on the law.

The Mishnah is predominantly in Hebrew; the Gemara, like the Palestinian Gemara of the third and fourth centuries CE, is largely in Aramaic.

Both Talmuds contain, in addition to comprehensive and subtle discussions of civil, criminal, domestic, and ritual law, materials called haggadah ("narration")—positions on morals and faith, explanations of Bible verses, parables, and legendary and historical narratives.

The Talmud, in covering every aspect of daily life, fulfills a role in Jewish life second in importance only to the Bible.

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