78 Results
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a man has the right to declare his wife forbidden to him in various situations, but he still has to pay her Kesubah
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a minor who grew up, or a non Jew who converted, with a prior Kesubah
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a virgin collects a Kesubah of 200 even if he didn’t give a Kesubah, or even if the kesubal says less than 200
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a widow can stay in her husband’s house and be supported by his estate even if not stipulated in her Kesubah, can the inheritors give her money, or an alternative place to live, can she refuse? can she refuse to live together with his sons who are young men, thereby giving herself a bad reputation? how kesubos in different parts of Israel were written to address this issue, her rights don’t continue if the inheritors sell the estate
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a widow can stay in her husband’s house and be supported by his estate even if not stipulated in her Kesubah, can the inheritors give her money, or an alternative place to live, can she refuse? can she refuse to live together with his sons who are young men, thereby giving herself a bad reputation? how kesubos in different parts of Israel were written to address this issue, her rights don’t continue if the inheritors sell the estate
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a widow can stay in her husband’s house and be supported by his estate even if not stipulated in her Kesubah, can the inheritors give her money, or an alternative place to live, can she refuse? can she refuse to live together with his sons who are young men, thereby giving herself a bad reputation? how kesubos in different parts of Israel were written to address this issue, her rights don’t continue if the inheritors sell the estate
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a woman is trying to collect while a divorce document is in her possession but she doesn't have her Kesubah or she has a Kesubah, but no divorce document
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a woman who accepts an assignment of her husband’s properties to his son forfeited her rights to collect her Kesubah from them
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admits guilt, she loses her Kesubah money, will be divorced, not executed
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after yibum she is his wife in all ways (no lingering yibum status), except Kesubah is based on the first husband’s estate, yam and yevamah become forbidden to each other’s relatives
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amounts of money and quality of money typically found in the Kesubah of various types of women
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an arusah who died in her husband’s lifetime doesn't collect (her children don’t collect) her Kesubah
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Bais din issues warning to wife in place of husband, cancel Kesubah money? drink water?
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benefactor provided for a woman whose husband is traveling, is he reimbursed? paying of debts of others?
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benefactor provided for a woman whose husband is traveling, is he reimbursed? paying of debts of others?
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biblical law or rabbinic law?
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biblically forbidden marriages sometimes have allow a Kesubah, yet rabbinically forbidden, don’t allow a Kesubah
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cases of monetary claims (Kesubah amount and her virgin status) can lead to a case of execution for the woman or her husband’s (false) witnesses, therefore different size courts are needed, 3 judges for monetary cases and 23 for possible death sentence cases
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collect from moveable objects?
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collecting a Kesubah or debt payment after admitting or a witness says that it was partially paid or devalued, is a swear required? to the orphans of her husband too? minor orphans? debtor not present
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collecting her Kesubah
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collection of a large Kesubah, living on estate of husbands heirs, living with her father, collecting up to 25 years
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collection of the Kesubah is secured by the sale of inferior land
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collection of the Kesubah is secured by the sale of inferior land
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committments of support to a wife’s daughter from a previous marriage, how this was stipulated, how it is treated if he divorces her and she or the daughter remarries, she requests cash instead of food, if the husband dies, how smart people wrote this condition, collectable from his properties?
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consequences of marriages which are forbidden on a rabbinic or biblical level, has rights to a Kesubah? no rights to fruits, sustenance for the wife, husband inherits wife, kohen husband becomes impure upon her burial, slaves eating terumah, forcing a divorce
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damager, debtor, or husband who owes Kesubah only has certain levels of fields
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damages are collected from superior land, a creditor from average land, a Kesubah is collected from inferior land
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damages are collected from superior land, a creditor from average land, a Kesubah is collected from inferior land
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defects in a wife such as pre-existing vows, bodily defects, a mole, bad breath, body odor, baldness, debate whether they existed prior to they kiddushin and also whether they are defects which could have been checked for prior to kiddushin, does she need a divorce?
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does a pilegesh get a Kesubah? if yes, how does differ from an ordinary wife?
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does a pilegesh set a Kesubah? if yes, how does differ from an ordinary wife?
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evidence of a virgin marrying and therefore a 200 Kesubah is her wearing a veil, wearing hair down at the Yom Kippur festivity in the vineyards, distribution of grains and sealed wine barrels at her wedding,
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examples of close readings by tannaim of kesubos and contracts led to deeper understandings and rulings
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examples of close readings by tannaim of kesubos and contracts led to deeper understandings and rulings
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examples of close readings by tannaim of kesubos and contracts led to deeper understandings and rulings
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father dies, leaves sons, daughters, wife, dividing assets depending on estate size, after prior obligations
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faulty appraisal for a sale by bais din for a Kesubah, orphans, or holy items
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forbidden marriages by biblical law receive their Kesubah, forbidden by rabbinic law don’t, reasons, lose other benefits?
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forfeit her Kesubah if she violated the ‘code of Moshe’ of the ‘code of Jewish women’, unseemly behavior
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he is not obligated to support her, or even she has to support him
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history of how the Kesubah debt was secured
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how long does a Kesubah claim or support rights last? her inheritors? 25 years? supplement amount above ordinary Kesubah? what level of land is the collection from?
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husband and purchaser of fields pledged to wife’s Kesubah may contest the validity of a divorce document
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husband designated property for Kesubah, sells the property, wife may collect from that property, or any other he owns
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husband obligated to ransom or heal her, may not divorce her and abandon this responsibility, yavam and estate of dead husband don’t have this obligation, responsibility to heal her extends to his estate, differences between chronic illness and one time healin
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Kesubah amounts for a young girl who had relations with an adult, or a woman with a male child, or a mukas eitz
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Kesubah amounts for daughter of kohen, daughter of a yisrael who marries a kohen or daughter of kohen who marries a yisrael?
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Kesubah of Rabbi Yehoshua the son of Rabbi Akiva provided that his wife support him so that he can study Torah
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Kesubah says usual amount but bride signs that she already received half
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kesubos are at least 200 for a virgin and 100 for a widow or a divorcee, but more can be added if he wants, reasons, husband died before or after marriage
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lost Kesubah, dispute over whether she had a 100 or 200 Kesubah, witnesses can report evidence
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marriages and relationship where the woman doesn’t drink the water, loses her Kesubah money
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money type to be paid for a Kesubah
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no Kesubah payment for an arusah that dies
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order of collection when multiple wives collect their Kesubah from 1 husband, Kesubah obligations or other obligations, debts, contracts? priorities of payments in many scenarios, surplus estate value of various assets beyond the kesubos amounts
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originally a widow swore to collect her Kesubah from orphans, Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel decreed a vow instead, she inherits the clothing she is wearing
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payments to multiple wives with unequal Kesubah agreements, payments to investors of unequal shares, various ways of analysis, discretion of the judges?
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refusing future benefit from ex-wife when she collects Kesubah from what he had previously given to hekdesh
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remarrying permitted?, collecting Kesubah money from first husband after having children from her second husband
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rights of widows to sell husband’s property to collect her Kesubah money or for food support, in some cases bais din approval needed, retaining or losing right to food support, divorcee, selling it in parts, when sale may be voided, if wife sold properties to satisfy her Kesubah and one sale is invalid, does it cancel all of them?
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selling her husbands land to collect her Kesubah for more or less than the true value, more than the Kesubah value
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she claims to be a mukas eitz, he claims that she had previous relations
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some benefits of marriage are forfeited by the wife and husband in certain marriages that aren’t proper
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some leniencies allowing a woman to collect her Kesubah from minor orphans to make her a more attractive candidate for remarriage
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Suria - copper utensils and bedspreads used to collect the Kesubah
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the Kesubah value which went to her husband when she died will be inherited by her children upon his death (and not shared with children of his other marriages), this right is in force even if it wasn’t written in her Kesubah
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the woman claims she didn’t collect her Kesubah from the estate, the heirs disagree
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time of announcements needed prior to a sale of Kesubah, orphans, or holy items
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unsigned divorce but witnesses of delivery of divorce, using unsigned divorce to collect Kesubah
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virgin divorcee, widow, chalutzah, or convert, ransomed, freed below three years old, Kesubah is one hundred (even if it is determined later that she is a virgin) and there can be no claim against her virgin status
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wife forfeits rights when she allows her husband to transfer property to the children
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wife who needs support (while her husband is away) swears (either once or twice?) about how much money she needed, the exact swear explained, is the mishnah about a wife or a widow? woman returns from trip with her husband and claims that he died or divorced her, husband says she should have supported herself, court granted her the right to borrow and the husband is responsible, supported by her father, or anyone else? her findings, burial
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wife’s Kesubah cancelled by shemittah in certain situations
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witness (even those who dislike her) of her defilement prevents her drinking the water, sometimes loses Kesubah
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woman waiting for yibum who sold property, or died, who owns the property?, who pays for her burial? how to deal with the first husband’s property which becomes owned by the yavam, but is pledged to the yevama’s Kesubah, to sell the land he does yibum, divorces her, and remarries her
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women who don’t drink the water, and may lose their Kesubah money