Talmud sobre Ketubot 1:10
אָמַר רַבִּי יוֹסֵי, מַעֲשֶׂה בְתִינוֹקֶת שֶׁיָּרְדָה לְמַלֹּאת מַיִם מִן הָעַיִן, וְנֶאֱנְסָה. אָמַר רַבִּי יוֹחָנָן בֶּן נוּרִי, אִם רֹב אַנְשֵׁי הָעִיר מַשִּׂיאִין לַכְּהֻנָּה, הֲרֵי זוֹ תִנָּשֵׂא לַכְּהֻנָּה:
R. Yossi disse: Uma vez, uma criança foi tirar água do poço e foi estuprada. R. Yochanan b. Nuri disse: Se a maioria dos homens da cidade (são casher e suas filhas e viúvas podem estar) casados com o sacerdócio, ela pode se casar com o sacerdócio. [Embora uma maioria seja geralmente suficiente, "pedigree" recebeu status especial e, nesse caso, os rabinos exigiam duas maiorias—a maioria das empresas (itinerantes) que passam por lá (como pedigree) e "a maioria da cidade". As mulheres não são casadas ab initio ao sacerdócio sem duas maiorias. E esta é a halachá.]
Jerusalem Talmud Yevamot
“Desecrated” children are children of the marriage of a Cohen with a divorcee or a prostitute; such a marriage is not incestuous and stringent exclusionary rules do not apply.. This refers to what we have stated there: “Ten classes returned from Babylonia.83Mishnah Qiddushin 4:1: “Ten classes returned from Babylonia, Cohanim, Levites, Israel, desecrated, proselytes, freed slaves, bastards, Gibeonites, people of unknown paternity, and foundlings. Cohanim, Levites, Israel may marry one another. Levites, Israel, desecrated, proselytes, and freed slaves, may marry one another. Proselytes, freed slaves, bastards, Gibeonites, people of unknown paternity, and foundlings, may marry one another.”
For R. Eliezer ben Jacob, bastards, people of unknown paternity, and foundlings, all form one group.
In Mishnah Ketubot 1:8, Rabban Gamliel and R. Eliezer hold that the unmarried mother of a child of unknown paternity is believed if she asserts that the father was one of the first six categories (or a Gentile). For them, the special category of “child of unknown paternity” does not exist since the child inherits the status of his mother.” In the opinion of Rebbi Eliezer ben Jacob, eight. In the opinion of Rabban Gamliel and Rebbi Eliezer, nine. In the opinion of the rabbis, ten.