Study Yevamot folio 98B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
If she is his father’s paternal half sister, he may maintain her as his wife. If she is his mother’s maternal half sister, he must divorce her. If she is his mother’s paternal half sister, R' Meir says he must divorce her, and the Rabbis say he may maintain her. This is as R' Meir would say: Any rel
And he is permitted to marry his maternal brother’s wife and his father’s brother’s wife, and all other forbidden relatives are also permitted to him. The expression: And all other relatives are also permitted to him, is added to include the father’s wife.
With regard to one who married a woman and her daughter and they converted, he may remarry one but must divorce the other one. He should not marry her ab initio. If his wife, the daughter, died, he is permitted to maintain his mother-in-law as his wife. And some teach that he is prohibited from ma
In any event, this baraita teaches that he is permitted to marry his brother’s wife. The Talmud asks: What, is it not referring to a case where his brother married her when he was already a convert? The Talmud answers: No, it is referring to a case where he married her while he was a non-Jew. T
The Master said: If one married a woman and her daughter and they converted, he may remarry one but must divorce the other one. He should not marry her ab initio. The Talmud asks: Now that he must divorce her, is it necessary to state that he should not marry her ab initio? The Talmud answers: Th