Notes[ 14 ]
 - M. Yev. 4 : 3. 
 . M. Yev. 4 : 4.
 1. M. Yev. 4 :.
 . M. Yev. 4 :.
 3. M. Yev. 6 : 1.
 4. T. Yev. :; M. Yev. 5 : 1 – 6.
 5. T. Yev. :.
 6. M. Ket. 4 :; 1: 1 – 6.
 . M. Ket. 4 :1.
 8. For the former argument, see Belkin, “Levirate and Agnate Marriage,” 98,
 39. For the latter, see Tal Ilan, Jewish Women in Greco-Roman Palestine (Pea-
 body, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, 1996 ), 155.
 9. Satlow, Jewish Marriage in Antiquity, 18 – 189 ; Weisberg, “The Babylonian
 Talmud’s Treatment of Levirate Marriage,” 6 – 65.
 8. M. Yev. : 1 – . See also Sifre Deuteronomy 88.
 
 - Sifre Deuteronomy 88. 
 
 - Mapping the Family (pages 45 – 96 ) 
 - Robin Fox, Kinship and Marriage (Baltimore: Penguin Books, 196), .
 . Meyers, “The Family in Early Israel,” 19.
- Meyers, “The Family in Early Israel,” 19.
- Num. 5: 14 ; Joshua : 14.
- For examples, see M. Yoma 3 : 9 and M.Taanit : 6 – .
- T. San. 1:1; B. Ket. 44 a; Y. Ket. 4 : 4. This usage reflects the exhortation in
 Deut. :1 that a woman whose husband brought a claim against her virgin-
 ity should be stoned at “the entrance to her father’s house.” See also Num. 3: 4 ;
 3:1.
 . M. Taanit 4 : imagines the priests in a given mishmar living in the same
 town.
- Num. 1 :, , 4, 6, 8. 3, 3, 34 , 36 , 38 , 4, 4.
- Meyers, “The Family in Early Israel,” 13.
 1. Cited in Steinberg, Kinship and Marriage in Genesis, .
- The Bavli proposes that the land in question is the family burial plot.
 1. B. Taanit 31 a. This suggests that while children were credited to their fa-
 ther’s lineage, the lineage of the mother was a factor in determining social posi-
 tion as well.
- For named individuals, T. Peah 4 : 11. For the latter, T. Yev. 1 :1; M. Arakhin
 : 4.
- B. Yev. 15 b; B. RH 18 a; B. Ket. 1b; B. Hullin 8a.
- B. Yev. b.
- B. BB 1 9a – b.
 1. B. Shabbat 1b; B. RH 3a.
- B. Sukkah 8b; B. Qid. 34 a; B. Arakhin 3 b.
- For an extended discussion of the “wife as house” metaphor, see Cynthia
 Baker, Rebuilding the House of Israel (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press,
 ), 48 – 59 ; and Gail Susan Labovitz, My Wife I Called “My House”: Marriage,
 Metaphor and Discourse of Gender. Ph.D. dissertation, Jewish Theological Semi-
 nary of America, .
 . Baker discusses the architecture of houses in Roman Palestine and ar-
 gues that the claim that excavated houses must have been used as residences by
 extended families cannot be substantiated. Her work suggests the mingling of
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- Robin Fox, Kinship and Marriage (Baltimore: Penguin Books, 196), .
