16354 records found
Last lines of a legal document. (Information from CUDL)
Small fragment with Hebrew script. Mentions Shabbat and Sunday.
Legal document. Probably a release. Mentions Fā'iza and perhaps her son Yiṣḥaq.
Letter fragment. In Judaeo-Arabic. The writer conveys longing for the addressee and reports that his wife and Ismāʿīl and Bū Surūr and Mufaḍḍal are all well. Regards from his father and brother and 'the students' (al-talāmidha). Regards to a certain ḥakīm (this seems more likely than ḥarīm/harem) and to Abū l-Faḍl and his wife. (Information in part from CUDL.) ASE.
Letter in Hebrew. Small fragment.
Halakhic discussion. In Judaeo-Arabic. Involves marriage laws and nikshei melog (usufruct property), citing Talmudic sources.
Magical fragment in Hebrew and Judaeo-Arabic and nomina barbara. Mentioning scorpions and pain/illness.
Small fragment with Hebrew script.
List or accounts, repeatedly mentioning niṣf (‘half’ and also the currency ‘half dinar’) and Ṣedaqa. (Information from CUDL)
Mysterious fragment in Aramaic naming Yosef ha-Kohen b. David. Needs examination.
Letter fragment. In Hebrew.
Accounts (?). (Information from CUDL)
Bifolium from a ledger of business accounts. In Judaeo-Arabic. Dated: the beginning of Jumādā II 444 AH (=September/October 1052 CE). Possibly of Nahray b. Nissim, according to Goitein. Mentions several names, including Abū l-Khayr. (Information from CUDL and from Goitein's index card)
Legal document in the hand of Ḥalfon b. Menashshe. Deed of a gift, granted by the wife of Abū Saʿīd to her daughter. It might specifically be a wedding gift. (Information in part from CUDL.)
Accounts for different days with Hebrew numerals. (Information from CUDL)
Grammatical work, probably on the infinitive.
Legal document mentioning a bridal gift and the name Abū l-Faḍl. (Information from CUDL)
Letter mentioning [Abū] Zikrī and illnesses. Small fragment. (Information in part from CUDL)
Accounts, mentioning names such as Abū l-Faraj and al-Naṣrānī (‘the Christian’). (Information from CUDL)
Halakhic work by Hananel b. Shmuel the judge