Citations:gorer


 * 1) * 1975,, Essays in Jewish and Comparative Legal History, E. J. Brill, page 134:
 * If the victim was worth 20 shekels alive and 2 dead, so that the loss, allowing for division of the cadaver, is 19, and the gorer fetches 30 shekels, then the owner of the victim will receive 15 shekels, over three-quarters of his loss.
 * 1) * 2008, Chaim Navon, translated by David Strauss, Genesis and Jewish Thought, KTAV Publishing House, pages 72-73:
 * The Eshnunna Laws recognize the difference between an ox that was not known to be a gorer and an ox that was known to be a gorer. Nonetheless, they are lenient with regard to an ox that killed a man, even when it was known to be a gorer.
 * 1) * 2008, Chaim Navon, translated by David Strauss, Genesis and Jewish Thought, KTAV Publishing House, pages 72-73:
 * The Eshnunna Laws recognize the difference between an ox that was not known to be a gorer and an ox that was known to be a gorer. Nonetheless, they are lenient with regard to an ox that killed a man, even when it was known to be a gorer.