Mishnah Sukkah contains five chapters. Included in its scope are the
Sukkah, or hut, which is lived in during
Sukkot, the laws concerning each of the
four species of vegetation which are waved during prayers over the holiday, and
Simchat Beit HaShoeivah, the Celebration of the Water-Drawing (, ), which took place at the
Temple in Jerusalem on the nights of Sukkot. • Chapter one begins with a discussion in the first mishnah of the maximum and minimum height of a Sukkah, the required number of walls to make it
kosher, and the amount of shade required in relation to sunlight. Other mishnayot (mishnayot 2-11) in chapter one discusses the time when the sukkah should appropriately be made for the holiday and the intentionality in building the sukkah, and the materials that may be used for the
s'chach, or shade covering on the roof of the sukkah. • Chapter two discusses the obligation to reside in the sukkah, how one fulfills this obligation, and who is exempt from the obligation. Included in the discussion of the mishnah are such subjects as sleeping in the sukkah (mishna 1), eating in the sukkah, and the extent to which
inclement weather affects the mitzvah of residing in a sukkah. The mishna (5-7) notes that women, children, and slaves are exempt from the mitzvah of residing in the sukkah. • Chapter three begins with a discussion of the
lulav or closed frond of the date palm tree. Mishnayot 1-3 of chapter three discuss the minimum requirements for the myrtle branch and the willow to fulfill the mitzvah of lulav. This is followed by a discussion of the laws of the kosher
etrog, the laws of binding the lulav, and the prayers that were said in the Temple in the ceremonies surrounding the lulav on Sukkot. (rear), along with the
lulav (center) and
hadassim branches (fore). • Chapter four begins with the first mishnah on the number of days on which the rituals of sukkot were to be performed; i.e.,whether the mitzvah of lulav and/ or
aravah should be performed also on the Sabbath day during the seven day holiday of Sukkot. The mishnah proceeds to discuss the manner in which the lulav mitzvah was performed in the Temple and then similarly discusses the aravah ceremony. This chapter concludes with a discussion of the water libation ceremony or
Nisukh ha-mayim. • Chapter five continues to describe the water libation ceremony in the first mishna and discusses the prohibition to play the flute on the Sabbath and on the Yom Tov or festival day. The second mishnah of the fifth chapter emphasizes the great joy of the water libation ceremony. The subsequent mishnayot deal with the shofar blasts and then the sacrifices in the Temple on Sukkot. ==Tosefta==