Type: Letter

10477 records found
Address: to Moses the judge b. M[...]. (Information from CUDL)
Letter by Yehoshuaʿ Maimonides (with motto) to the cantor Faraj Allah. (Information from CUDL)
End of a letter in Judaeo-Arabic. Mentions Sayyidnā and (possibly in the address) [...] b. Moshe. (Information in part from CUDL.)
Fragment of a letter in Judaeo-Arabic. Mentioning several ships and bundles of letters. Possibly related to the India trade based on the reference to a nākhudhā. (Information in part from CUDL)
Letter fragment (part of a few lines of recto. Legible phrases include "I ask my master for help. . . . al-jalīl adām allāh 'izzahu. . . .). ASE.
Letter fragment (part of a few lines from the bottom of recto). The phrase האדא אלשי is repeated twice. Part of the closing salāms are preserved. ASE.
Letter fragment (part of a few lines from the opening of recto). Subject difficult to determine. ASE.
Address (אלשיך אלאגל) and jottings. (Information from CUDL)
Letter fragment from Shelomo b. Yehuda to Efrayim b. Shemarya.
Letter (?) (Information from CUDL)
Letter fragment (part of a few lines of recto and verso). Legible phrases include "May God 'write' his health. . . . Forgive me. I already paid. . . . the slave [i.e. the writer] to 'Aydhab." ASE.
Probably a letter. (Information from CUDL)
Letter mentioning Manṣūr b. [...] and the 28th of Iyyar. (Information from CUDL)
Document, possibly a letter, mentioning various sums of money. (Information from CUDL)
Recto: Letter fragment in Arabic script. الله تعالى في ذلك... قد تعطل شغله في هذه... قليل جدا وقد...خمس احمال صحبة اصغر مماليكه.
Minute fragment. A beginning of a letter addressed to Mevorakh b. Saadya written by Halfon b. Menashshe Halevi. AA
Damaged document, probably from a letter in Hebrew, written on parchment, mainly sending regards to family members. AA
Letter to Abū l-Ḥasan. (Information from CUDL)
Minute fragment from a beginning of a letter to a notable. Contains a praise for his sons, but no more details preserved. AA
Small and damaged fragment, probably from an opening of a letter to a notable who is referred to as אלחבר.