Female Anatomy
Hebrew
R. Judah said in the name of Samuel: There was an instance when the disciples of R. Ishmael once cleansed with boiling water [the corpse of] a prostitute who had been condemned by the king to [death by] burning. They examined and found 252 [limbs]. [They came and inquired of R. Ishmael, “How many limbs has the human body?” He replied to them, “248.”] Thereupon they said to him, “But we have examined and found 252?” He [R. Ishmael] replied to them, “Perhaps you made the examination on a woman, in whose case Scripture adds two hinges [in her reproductive organs] and two doors [of the womb].”
It was taught [in a baraita] that R. Eleazar said: As a house has hinges, so a woman’s [body] has hinges [in her reproductive organs], as it is said in Scripture: She bowed herself and gave birth, for her hinges [lit., birth pangs] turned suddenly upon her (1 Samuel 4:19). R. Joshua says: As a house has doors, so a woman’s [womb] has doors, as it is said in Scripture: Because it shut not up the doors of my [mother’s] womb (Job 3:10). R. Akiva says: As a house has a key, so a woman has a key [for the womb], as it is said in Scripture: And [God] opened her womb (Genesis 30:22).
In light of the opinion of R. Akiva [whose exegesis adds a fifth limb, i.e., the key], is there not a difficulty in connection with what R. Ishmael’s disciples [discovered; i.e., 253 vs. 252 limbs]?—[No!] It may be that since it [the key to the womb] is very small, it was dissolved [in the course of] boiling [the remains of the corpse].
Translated by Markham J. Geller and Lennart Lehmhaus.
Credits
b. Bekhorot 45a, trans. Markham J. Geller and Lennart Lehmhaus, publication forthcoming. Copyright Markham J. Geller and Lennart Lehmhaus. Used with permission of the translators.
Published in: The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization, vol. 2: Emerging Judaism.