The Torah, together with its ancient commentary (the Talmud) is the basis of Israelite law.
Israelite law is the only ancient one which provides for social justice (widows, orphans, poor, charity, etc.) and prohibits idolatry.
If you are referring to Tamar who was a daughter-in-law and graddaughter-in-law of Jacob in Genesis then I'd say she was an Israelite. Hebrew, Jew and Israelite being interchangeable terms.Jewish answer:Our tradition is that Tamar was the daughter of Shem, born shortly before his death. She was pre-Hebrew and pre-Israelite. Because she and her father were servants of God (see Rashi commentary, Genesis ch.14) from the ancient tradition (one of the few tiny branches of mankind that never went over to idolatry), she was deemed worthy of marriage into Jacob's family.Note that there is also a much later Tamar; a daughter of King David, who was Israelite.
Christiana van Houten has written: 'The alien in Israelite law' -- subject(s): Bible
Joshua certainly would have believed Moses to be an Israelite, but nobody "alleged" that Moses was an Israelite. Moses was an Israelite because of his ancestry and because of his connection to the people and he believed he was an Israelite.
Yes
Saul.See also:The Israelite kings
The American Israelite was created on 1854-07-15.
Koby Israelite was born on 1966-11-23.
Christian Israelite Church was created in 1822.
Her name was Ruth. She was married to an Israelite who had moved to Moab and subsequently died. She moved with her mother-in-law, Naomi, to Israel and eventually married Boaz, an Israelite. Her descendants included Jesse, David, and both Mary and Joseph, as well as Jesus.
The same as that of the rest of the populace. In Jewish law, slaves had rights. It was forbidden to hit or injure them, to feed them less than the houseowner, etc., etc.