Munich Codex Hebraicus 95 of the Babylonian Talmud
Talmud Bavli Manuscript Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 141
Talmud Bavli Manuscript Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 140
Talmud Bavli Pesachim Yoma Chagiga Manuscript Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 6
Various Fragments of Talmud Bavli Manuscript Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 153 (2)
Talmud Bavli Avoda Zara 5a 6b with Rashi Manuscript Fragment Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 436 (14)
Talmud Bavli Yevamot 74a 75b with Marginal Notes Manuscript Fragment Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 419 (II 1)
Talmud Bavli Niddah Manuscript Fragment Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 419 (II 4)
Talmud Bavli Sanhedrin 59a 59b Manuscript Fragment Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 419 (II 2)
Talmud Bavli Bava Kama 112b 117b with Comments Manuscript Fragment Munich Library BSB Cod Hebr 153 (14)
Talmud Bavli Fragments and Musaf Prayer Fragment Tubingen University Library Manuscript Ma IV 8
Munich Codex Hebraicus 95 is the only surviving manuscript in the world that contains, with the exception of two missing leaves, the complete text of the Babylonian Talmud including some extra tracts (Masechtot Ketanot): Derech Eretz Zuta, Pirkei Azzai, Kalla, Soferim, and Gerim. In addition, the manuscript contains some texts that do not relate directly to the Talmud. Numerous entries of the names of owners make it possible to trace the history of the manuscript, which was written in France in 1342. According to an entry in a manuscript of a Bible now preserved at the State and University Library of Hamburg, this Talmud was in the possession of the Jewish merchant family Ulma in Pfersee near Augsburg in the year 1772. Some time later it was sold to the Augustinian priory of Polling (Upper Bavaria). After the dissolution of the monastery in 1803, the manuscript was transferred together with other valuable books to the Munich Court Library, which became the Bavarian State Library, where it is now preserved.