Talmud Jerusalem
Talmud Jerusalem

Talmud for Ketubot 4:1

דתנינן תמן היא אומרת מוכת עץ אני והוא אומר לא כי אלא דרוסת איש את הדא דתימר בכתובת מנה מאתים אבל לקיימה אינו רשאי משום ספק סוטה וכולהן מן ההיא דא"ר הילא בשם ר' אלעזר מצא הפתח פתוח אסור לקיימה משום ספק סוטה על דעתיה דרבי לעזר בוגרת אימתי היא נישאת בתולה מן הנישואין אימתי היא נישאת מוכת עץ כרבי מאיר אימתי היא נישאת נישמעינה מן הדא אם יש עדים שיצאת בהינומא ולא אידכר רביעי הדא אמרה דלית רביעי כלום ואלמנה ביום החמישי שאם אומר את לו באחד מכל ימות השבת אף הוא משכים ויוצא למלאכתו מתוך שאת אומר לו בחמישי בשבת אף הוא שמח עמה חמישי ששי ושביעי משה התקין שבעת ימי המשתה ושבעת ימי האבל ולא התקין לאלמנה כלום אף על גב דתימר לא התקין לאלמנה כלום טעונה ברכה מבועז דכתיב (רות ד׳:ב׳) ויקח בועז עשרה אנשים מזקני העיר ויאמר שבו פה וישבו אמר רבי אלכסנדרי מיכן שאין קטן רשאי לישב עד שיאמר לו הגדול שב אמר רבי פינחס מיכן לבית דין שאין ממנין זקנים בבתי משתיות שלהן אמר רבי לעזר בי רבי יוסי מיכן לברכת חתנים שהיא בעשרה אמר ר' יודה בר פזי ולא סוף דבר בחור לבתולה אלא אפילו אלמון לאלמנה מבועז שהיה אלמון ורות היתה אלמנה וכתיב (רות א׳:י״ט) ותהום כל העיר עליהם ואיפשר כן כל קרתא מתבהלה בגין נעמי על עליבתא אלא אשתו של בועז מתה באותו היום עד כל עמא גמל חסדא נכנסה רות עם נעמי ונמצא זו יוצאת וזו נכנסת תני אומרים ברכת חתנים כל שבעה <רבי ירמיה סבר מימר מפקין כלתא כל שבעה> אמר ליה רבי יוסי והא תני רבי חייה אומרים ברכת אבלים כל שבעה אית לך מימר מפקין מיתא כל שבעה מאי כדון מה כאן מנחם עמו אף כאן משמח עמו מה כאן מזכירין אף כאן מזכירין תני א"ר יודה ביהודה בראשונה היו מעמידין אותן שני שושבינין אחד משל כלה ואחד משל חתן אף על פי כן לא היו מעמידין אותן אלא בשעת נישואין ובגליל לא היו עושין כן ביהודה בראשונה היו מייחדין החתן אצל הכלה שעה כדי שיהא לבו גס בה ובגליל לא היו עושין כן ביהודה בראשונה היו השושבינין מפשפשין במקום החתן ובמקום הכלה ובגליל לא היו עושין כן ביהודה בראשונה היו השושבינין ישינין במקום חתן ובמקום כלה ובגליל לא היו עושין כן

If it becomes shadowy, the intermediate period (twilight) has arrived. If darkness has set in, so that the upper atmosphere has become indistinguishable from the lower, night has arrived. Rabbi says: When, at the period of the new moon, the sun commences to go down and the moon to appear, it is twilight. know that I am the Lord, when I have opened your graves.2 In Palestine they said: Also the Key of Sustenance, for it is said, Thou openest thy hand etc.3 Why does not R. Johanan include also this [key]? — Because in his view sustenance is [included in] Rain.4 R. ELIEZER SAYS: ON THE FIRST DAY OF THE FEAST etc. The question was asked, Whence did R. Eliezer derive this? Did he learn it from Lulab5 or from the Libation of Water?6 If he learnt it from Lulab, then just as the obligation of the use of the Lulab comes into force on the [first] day of Tabernacles, so too should we begin to make mention of rain on that day. Or perhaps he learnt it from Libation. [If so, then] just as Water Libation may be [carried out] on the evening [preceding the first day] — (for a Master [interpreting the verse], And the meal-offering thereof and their drink-offerings,7 said, Even by night)-so too should one begin to make mention of rain on that evening!8 — Come and hear: R. Abbahu said: R. Eliezer deduced it from Lulab only. Some there are who say: R. Abbahu had a tradition. Whilst others say: He based it on a Baraitha. Which is the Baraitha? — It has been taught: ‘When do we [begin to] make mention of Rain? R. Eliezer says: From the time of the taking up of the Lulab; R. Joshua says, From the time when the Lulab is discarded.9 Said R. Eliezer: Seeing that these Four Species are intended only to make intercession for water,10 therefore as these cannot [grow] without water so the world [too] cannot exist without water. R. Joshua said to him: Is not rain on the Feast a sure sign of [God's] anger? R. Eliezer replied: I too did not say to pray but to make mention. And just as one makes mention of the Revival of the Dead all the year round11 although it will take place only in its proper time, so too should mention be made of the Power of Rain all the year round although it comes only in its due season. Therefore if one desires to make mention all the year round he may do so. Rabbi says: I hold the view that when one ceases to pray [for rain]12 one should also no longer make mention of it. R. Judah b. Bathyra says: On the second day of the Feast one [begins] to make mention. R. Akiba says: On the sixth day of the Feast. R. Judah says in the name of R. Joshua: The last to step before the Ark on the last day of the Feast makes mention, the first does not; on the first day of Passover the first makes mention, the last does not. Did not then R. Eliezer reply well to R. Joshua?- R. Joshua can answer you: It is quite in order to make mention of the Revival of the Dead [all the year round], since any day may be its time, but is rain seasonable at all times? Have we not learnt: Should Nisan terminate and then rain fall it is a sign of [God's] anger, for it is said, Is it not wheat harvest to-day etc.?13 ‘R. Judah b. Bathyra says: on the second day of the Feast one [begins] to make mention’. What is R. Judah b. Bathyra's reason? — It has been taught: R. Judah b. Bathyra says, Of the second day of the Feast, Scripture Says, we-niskehem,14 [‘and their drink-offerings’] and of the sixth day, u-nesakeah15 [‘and its drink-offerings’] and of the seventh day, kemishpatam16 [according to their rule]. Note [the letters] Mem, Yod, Mem which form the word mayim [‘water’].17 Here you have the biblical allusion to the Libation of Water. And what makes him [R. Judah b. Bathyra] fix it on the second day? — Because [the first of the allusions to the Water Libation] is found in connection [with the order for] the second day. Hence why we should [begin] to make mention on the second day. R. Akiba says: On the sixth day of the Feast one [begins] to make mention, for of the sixth day Scripture says, And its drink-offerings.18 Scripture thus speaks of two libations,19 the Libation of Water and the Libation of Wine. Perhaps both Libations must be of wine? — He [R. Akiba] is of the same opinion as R. Judah b. Bathyra who said, There is an allusion to water.2

Jerusalem Talmud Kiddushin

MISHNAH: A wife may be acquired1In matters of criminal law, any relations the woman might have with another man would be adultery. The husband cannot live with his wife (and does not acquire any dowry she might bring with her) unless he accepts the financial responsibilities incumbent upon a husband in a public ceremony, attended by at least 10 witnesses (cf. Peah 6:2, Note 46). The acquisition, or betrothal, mentioned here only needs the presence of two witnesses. in three ways; she regains her autonomy in two ways. She is acquired by money2The woman agrees to be preliminarily married for a monetary consideration given in the presence of two witnesses., or by a document3A written promise of marriage., or by intercourse4Attested to by two witnesses. It is enough for the witnesses to confirm that the parties were together in a locked bedroom for a period of time sufficient for intercourse. Since one speaks of preliminary marriage, the couple is in principle forbidden to live together after such intercourse and before the definitive marriage. There is a midrashic doctrine that no woman can become pregnant from her first intercourse unless she had lesbian or autoerotic experiences [Gen.rabba45(5), 51(11); Pesiqta rabbati 42, p. 177].. By money, the House of Shammai say, by a denar5A Roman silver denar; under Augustus and his first successors about 3.5 g of silver. or a denar’s value; but the House of Hillel say, by a peruṭa or a peruṭa’s value. How much is a peruṭa6The peruṭa was a small Hasmonean copper coin which disappeared with the end of the Jewish commonwealth, more than 100 years before the compilation of the Mishnah. Therefore, its value has to be defined in terms of Roman coins.? One eighth of an Italic assarius7Corresponding to 1/192 of a denar. Assarius is the old name of the Roman as. In rabbinic practice, a peruṭa is defined as half a grain (1/960 of a troy oz. or 0.0324 g) of sterling silver.. She regains her autonomy by a bill of divorce or by the husband’s death. A sister-in-law8The widow of a brother who died childless; cf. Introduction to Tractate Yebamot. is acquired9In definitive marriage. By biblical standards there is no preliminary levirate marriage. by intercourse; she regains her autonomy by ḥaliṣah or by the brother-in-law’s death10Before she entered the levirate marriage. Once she is married, she is a wife in all respects and regains her autonomy by divorce or widowhood..
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Jerusalem Talmud Ketubot

There16Mishnah 4:13., we have stated: “The female children you will have by me shall live in my house and be supported by my estate,” and it was stated about this: They will be clothed with garments supplied by me17One should not interpret מזוֹנוֹת narrowly as “food” but more generally as “sustenance” (but excluding rent.). For whom does the daughter work? Let us hear from the following18Mishnah 12:2, about the wife’s daughter who marries while her mother’s (ex-)husbands continue to support her.: “The husband has to sustain her and they pay the cost of her sustenance.” This means, he feeds her but she works for her husband19And if the daughter is still unmarried, she works for herself.. Rebbi Yose20Rosh (Chapter 12, #1) reads: Rebbi Assi; this means that he read here רִבִּי יָסָא; an unlikely reading. said, this means that if somebody had agreed to sustain his daughter-in-law, he has to sustain her, but she works for his son. If he wants her to be with him21The daughter of his divorcee, in the case that her mother did not remarry. but she does not want to, the law is with her, as we have stated: “They pay the cost of her sustenance.” If she fell ill, it is as if she had married. If she died, is it as if she had married22Is the husband’s obligation one that the wife’s daughter’s heirs can collect?? If she died, she already is dead23The obligation ends with the daughter’s death. In the Babli, Baba batra 140a, this is considered to be obvious..
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Jerusalem Talmud Taanit

66The story of this dispute should be compared with the Babli version, Berakhot 27b, where R. Joshua’s profession is given as a charcoal burner. Since Rabban Gamliel in the aftermath of the destruction of the Temple insisted not only on uniformity of practice but also of doctrine (and in this was successful in eliminating Sadduceeism) and R. Joshua was known for his dislike of public quarrels, Rabban Gamliel thought that he was taking little risk in provoking a quarrel. It happened that one student came and asked Rebbi Joshua: What is about evening prayer? He said to him: It is voluntary. He asked Rabban Gamliel: What is about evening prayer? He said to him: It is obligatory. He said to him: But Rebbi Joshua told me that it was voluntary. He said to him: Tomorrow, when I enter the assembly hall, stand up and ask me about this practice. The next day, this student stood up and asked Rabban Gamliel: What is about evening prayer? He said to him: It is obligatory. He said to him: But Rebbi Joshua told me that it was voluntary. Rabban Gamliel said to Rebbi Joshua: Are you the one who says it is voluntary? He answered him: No. He said to him: Stand up on your feet so that they may testify against you. Then Rabban Gamliel was sitting down and lecturing while Rebbi Joshua was standing up until the people started talking and said to Rebbi Ḥuṣpit the interpreter: Send the people home. They said to Rebbi Zenon the ḥazan: Start67The ḥazan was not only the reader in congregational prayers, but also the general organizer of religious affairs. In outlying communities he was the ritual slaughterer and the conduit through whom questions of religious practice were addressed to the Academies. Here it seems that he had to recite the prayer at the end of a study which it was customary to start with a Bible verse and that the people spontaneously chose one which was a curse on the speaker.! He said: Start! All the people stood up and said to him: Certainly, on whom did your evil not pass always68Nah. 3:19.? They immediately appointed Rebbi Eleazar ben Azariah to the Yeshivah when he was 16 years old; his head became all white. Rebbi Aqiba sat and was sad; he said, not that he is a greater Torah scholar than I am, but he comes from a greater family than I do; hail to the man whose forefathers created merit for him, hail to the man who has a peg to hang on to. What was Rebbi Eleazar ben Azariah’s peg? He was the tenth generation after Ezra69Also he was very rich and could afford the expenses of representing the Jewish population before the Roman government.. How many seats were there? Rebbi Jacob ben Sisi said: Eighty seats were there of accomplished scholars, not to count those standing behind the railing. Rebbi Yose ben Rebbi Abun said 300 were there, not to count those standing behind the railing. As we have stated there70Mishnah Zevaḥim 1:3.: “On the day Rebbi Eleazar ben Azariah was appointed to the Academy.” There we have stated71Mishnah Ketubot 4:6.: “This inference did Rebbi Eleazar ben Azariah present before the Sages at the vineyard of Jabneh.” Was there a vineyard? It means that the scholars sat there in rows like vines in a vineyard. Rabban Gamliel went immediately to pacify each one in his house. He came to Rebbi Joshua and found him occupied with the making of needles. He asked him: This is how you earn your living? He answered him: Until now you did not know? Woe to the generation whose caretaker you are! He said to him: I humble myself before you. They sent a washerman to Rebbi Eleazar ben Azariah, but some say that it was Rebbi Aqiba. He told him: The sprinkler, son of a sprinkler, should sprinkle. Should anyone who is neither a sprinkler nor the son of a sprinkler say to the sprinkler: your water is water from a cave and your ashes are ashes from a fireplace? He said to him: You made your peace with him! I and you shall go in the morning to Rabban Gamliel’s door. Nevertheless they did not remove him from his dignity but made him head of the court.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Jerusalem Talmud Berakhot

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Yevamot

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Yevamot

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Yevamot

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Yevamot

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Gittin

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Gittin

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Bava Batra

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Ketubot

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Bava Batra

Available for Premium members only

Jerusalem Talmud Gittin

Available for Premium members only
Full Chapter