16354 records found
Legal document (witness statement), mentioning the elder Abū l-S[urūr] Peraḥya. In the hand of Ḥalfon b. Menashshe. (Information from CUDL)
Minute fragment from a ketubah.
Recto: accounts. Expenses are listed, with coptic numerals: carats (qirāṭ) and piasters (qirsh) are mentioned. Verso: accounts mentioning wages. (Information from CUDL)
Minute fragment from a ketubah from Cairo. The name Berakhot- the bride's or groom's father- is mentioned. AA
Minute fragment from a legal deed mentioning Qasr al-Sham'
Accounts. (Information from CUDL)
Top of a legal deed from the year 1425 Era of documents= 1124.
Fragment from a bill of divorce (get) from Fustat. The husband's name is Ya'aqov.
Fragment from a bill of divorce (get). AA
Recto: legal document mentioning Moses ha-Kohen b. [...], [...] al-Ḥusayn, sister-in-law of [...]. Verso: Arabic document, mentioning names. (Information from CUDL)
Minute fragment probably from a ketubah. AA
Legal document mentioning a certain Mevorakh. (Information from CUDL)
Small and much damaged fragment from a ketubah. Contains the immersion clause so can be dated to 1176 onwards. AA
Accounts. (Information from CUDL)
Legal document, possibly in the hand of Ḥalfon b. Menashshe, mentioning the Bet Din, Abū l-Ḥasan, and repeatedly mentions רקעה בדינאר ‘note for a dinar’. (Information from CUDL)
Minute fragment from the end of a legal deed. One of the parties involved named Ya'aqov. Signed by Tamim b. Shm[…]. AA
Torn at the top-right, but otherwise almost complete, but faded, Bill of divorce (get). The name of the bride is Turfa. The signatures are too faded to read. On verso two signatures, by Elazar b. Zedaqa and Elazar b. Saadya, probably by the witnesses approving the get was delivered to the wife. AA
Fragment of a letter from an unknown person named Menashshe. The letter contains descriptions of adventures in the sea because of the stormy weather. (Information from Gil, Kingdom, Vol. 4, #834) VMR
Fragment from a ketubah, probably a replacement for a lost one. Contains the immersion clause so can be dated to 1176 onwards. AA
Fragment of a letter in Judaeo-Arabic. Little content preserved. (Information in part from CUDL)