no, fish is not meat under Jewish law.
A kosher butcher.
Kashrut (Jewish dietary law) classifies food into three categories:Meat - includes red meat and poultryDairy - anything made from or with milkPareve - neutral, containing neither meat or dairy but can include eggs and fish
Fleishig is "meaty," that is, made of or containing meat, or suitable for a meat meal according to Jewish dietary law.
Jewish law prohibits eating milk and meat together.
No - if we did, the Jewish world would be a very different place as we wouldn't have that famous Jewish delicacy bagel mit lox un a schmear (a bagel filled with smoked salmon and cream cheese)!
under rabbinical law, yes!
No. That is against Kosher law. Do not mix milk (sour cream) into a meat dish.
while Poland ruled, Kresy lived under Jewish law interupted by Jewish judges
Yes, but under current law in most states they cannot get married.
Assuming you are not allergic to either, yes. If you are asking from the perspective of Orthodox Judaism, check out the web link -- not all fish qualify. By the way, Jewish law prohibits eating fish with meat. I would assume it's therefore considered dairy.
When Jesus was born, the Jewish Law or Torah was the religious system of the Jewish people of the time. Thus Jesus was born 'under the Law' in terms of both when He was born and in terms of the prevailing system to which Jews at that time were subject.
because it is against the Torah-law