📖Ramayana Book II : Ayodhya Kanda Chapter 24 Verse 20: Rama spoke thus these words “as long as a woman is alive ,her husband is god and master to her”.
📖Ramayana Book II : Ayodhya Kanda Chapter 24 Verse 25: Even if a woman is interested in religious vows and fastings in addition to being the best of the excellent ;if she does not obey her husband she will become ill-fated !
📖Srimad Bhagavatam 6:18.33-35
A husband is the supreme demigod for a woman. The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Lord Vāsudeva, the husband of the goddess of fortune, is situated in everyone’s heart and is worshiped through the various names and forms of the demigods by fruitive workers. Similarly, a husband represents the Lord as the object of worship for a woman. A wife should be chaste and should abide by the orders of her husband. She should very devoutly worship her husband as a representative of Vasudeva.
📖Manusmriti 5:152
Be he ill-mannered or of licentious habits or destitute of good qualities,—the husband should always be attended upon like a god by the true wive.
📖Srimad Bhagavatam 7:11-25
To render service to the husband, to be always favorably disposed toward the husband, to be equally well disposed toward the husband’s relatives and friends, and to follow the vows of the husband — these are the four principles to be followed by women described as chaste.
📖Shiv Purana Section 2.3 – Rudra-samhita (3): Parvati-Khanda, Chapter 54- Verse 51-56: To a wife the husband is god, preceptor, virtue, holy centre and sacred rite. She should cast off everything and adore him alone, She who forsakes her husband and secretly violates her fidelity is born as a she-owl of cruel nature wasting its days in the hollow of a tree. If she desires to beat her husband in retaliation, she becomes a tiger or a wild cat. She who ogles at another man becomes squint-eyed. She who partakes of sweet dish denying the same to her husband becomes a pig in the village or a wild goat eating its own dung. She who partakes of sweet dish denying the same to her husband becomes a pig in the village or a wild goat eating its own dung.