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Bible Encyclopedias
Ketubot

The 1901 Jewish Encyclopedia

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Treatise in the Mishnah, the Tosefta, and in the Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmuds. In the Mishnaic order of the Seder Nashim, Ketubot stands second. It is divided into thirteen chapters, containing in the aggregate 101 paragraphs, of which the following is a synopsis:

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Tosefta and Gemara.

The Tosefta contains much which serves to illustrate and supplement the Mishnah. Especially noteworthy is its description of the ancient marriage customs of Judea and Galilee (1:4), the peculiar mode of betrothal in Alexandria (4:9), and the plan of Simeon b. Sheṭaḥ to make divorces more difficult (12:1).

Both Gemaras discuss and explain the statements of the Mishnah, and contain, moreover—especially the Babylonian Gemara—a mass of stories, legends, aphorisms, and proverbs, as well as other important haggadic interpretations and comments.

Maxims and Haggadot.

The following passages from Ketubot may be cited: "When impure words are spoken, close thine ears" (5b); "He who useth impure speech will forfeit all the rewards of his life" (8b); "The creditor need not keep the paid bill" (19b); "Thou shouldest have neither a savage dog nor a broken stairway in thy house, lest people come to harm" (41b); "'His righteousness endureth for ever' (Psalms 112:3) refers to him who learns the Torah and teaches others, and to him who has books and lends them to his felḷow students in order to make their study easier" (50a); "Do not act as judge in the case either of thy friend or of thine enemy, for thy sentiments will not allow thee to be just to both" (105b); "It were better to submit thyself to the torture of a death by fire than to cause shame to thy neighbor in public" (67b).

Special mention should also be made of the enumeration of the benedictions customary at a wedding (7a-8b), of the Hebrew words of consolation (8b), of the catalogue of the ordinances which were established at Usha (49b-50a), of the narratives of several teachers who were absent from their families an unusually long time for the sake of study (62b-63a), of the detailed account of the death of R. Judah ha-Nasi (103a-104a), and of the words of many teacherswho extolled the superiority of Palestine, expressing their longing for the land of their fathers, and who, when they had reached their goal, kissed the stones and cast themselves in the dust (110b-112b).

S. S.
J. Z. L.
Bibliography Information
Singer, Isidore, Ph.D, Projector and Managing Editor. Entry for 'Ketubot'. 1901 The Jewish Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​tje/​k/ketubot.html. 1901.
 
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