cellio: (talmud)
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This week we begin a new tractate, Eruvin. On Shabbat one is not permitted to carry items from a private domain (like a house) into a public domain (like the street) or vice versa. However, this doesn't apply to houses around a central (fenced or walled) courtyard, an architectural style common in ancient Israel; this can be viewed as one big private domain even though it's multi-dwelling. (There are rules, like the people living there actually need to share food on Shabbat.) Applying similar principles, a larger space, like a town, can be enclosed by an eiruv and thus treated as a private domain.

The first several pages of this tractate discuss alleys. An alley is not like a courtyard because it's open at both ends (it's a thoroughfare). The rabbis discuss the effects of walls, posts, doorways, and openings below a certain width. On today's daf we learn that it was taught in the name of R. Yochanan that Jerusalem, a walled city with a central road running through the center, would have been treated as a public domain because of the road, were it not for the fact that its gates were closed at night, rendering it like a courtyard. 'Ulla, too, said the same of the city of Mahuza, which also had gates that were closed at night. But Beit Hillel said you don't need to close the doors; they just need to be present.(6b)

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Date: 2013-03-15 03:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/merle_/
All the good questions are the ones that spawn off their own quandries. It is just the rare major religion that relishes it. ;-)

(well, relishes it if the relish is kosher dill.. which I used to believe actually passed under a rabbi's hands on some conveyor belt when I was young...)

For some fun, google ["daf bit eruvin 6"]. Apparently your subject line is a keyword for torrents from way back before you wrote this post. Stop time traveling!

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