“USED TO THIS DAY THROUGHOUT THE JEWISH WORLD AS THE AUTHORITATIVE, TRADITIONAL EDITION OF THE TALMUD AND ITS COMMENTARIES”: THE RENOWNED VILNA SHAS
(JUDAICA) (TALMUD). The Vilna Shas [Babylonian Talmud]. Vilna: The Widow and Brothers Romm, 1886-96. Twenty volumes. Folio (11 by 16 inches), contemporary full dark brown blind-tooled calf.
Early edition of the renowned Vilna Shas, 20 large folio volumes in contemporary calf.
“In 1880 the first volumes of an extraordinary edition of the Babylonian Talmud were published in Vilna, the center of rabbinic learning in eastern Europe for almost half a millennium. Known colloquially as the ‘Vilna Shas,’ this edition, published by the firm of ‘The Widow and Brothers Romm’ and completed in 1886, has been used to this day throughout the Jewish world as the authoritative, traditional edition of the Talmud and its commentaries. The Vilna Shas followed the classic layout of the printed Talmud, with the text of the Talmud—both the Mishnah and the Gemara—in the center of the page, and with commentaries running down the length of both margins… The last edition of the Vilna Talmud was published in 1897—the year in which the Zionist movement was founded in Basle, Switzerland, and the Jewish Labor Bund was founded in Vilna… Through these turbulent times, as the Romm Talmud’s plates and templates were transferred both to the Land of Israel and to the United States, the Vilna Shas retained its centrality throughout the Jewish world, still referred to and honored by its original site of publication, the ‘Jerusalem of Lithuania” (Stanislawski, “The ‘Vilna Shas’ and East European Jewry,” in Printing the Talmud). Title pages printed in red and black, within a wood-engraved architectural border. Text in Hebrew. Ink stamp “Printed in Poland” on title pages.
A few volumes with skillful restoration to text block and spines, some corners gently bumped. A desirable set of this landmark edition in contemporary calf.