The role of Jewish women in economic activity in Egypt during the 5th century AH/11AD

Authors

  • Amal Adnan Ahmed General Directorate of Education in Babylon

Keywords:

the role of Jewish women, economic activity, Egypt

Abstract

The Jewish community and those in charge of it were keen to educate Jewish girls, even though that education was limited to the teachings of Jewish law, and to learn some craft skills that the Jewish girl had learned from her mother or through Jewish women with experience in a particular field, and that education or transfer of expertise from one generation to the next. Another had allowed the Jewish woman to participate in economic activity, inside and outside her home, to secure the financial income that covered her expenses, and she was also the breadwinner for her family. Some of the professions that the Jewish woman practiced were limited to women, and some of them required her to leave the home, and some of the professions she practiced in her home and since at an early age, in both cases the Jewish woman had a role in society as an active and productive element, and she also had some financial independence in that era.

References

*Torah

*The Quran

Abd al-Hakam, Abd al-Rahman bin Abd Allah (d. 257 AH/871), Conquests of Egypt and Morocco, Library of Religious Culture, Cairo, 1415 AH, p. 279.

Foreign references:

Goitein, A Mediterranean Society, The Jewish Communities of the world as portrayed in the Documents of the Cairo Geniza, Economic Foundations, University of California press, 1967.

Hassan, Muhammad Khalifa and Al-Nabawi Jabr Siraj, The Geniza and the Jewish Synagogues in Egypt, Center for Religious and Historical Studies, Cairo, 1999, p. 12.

Krakowski, Eve, Female Adolescence in the Cairo Geniza documents, Chicago, Illinois, 2012..

Lotf, Omar Mustafa, The Educational Life of Egyptian Jews in the Islamic Era, Egyptian General Book Authority, Cairo, 2019 AD.

Qandil, Abdel Razzaq Ahmed, Inheritance in Judaism and Islam, a Comparative Study, Center for Oriental Studies, Cairo, 2008, p. 71.

Qandil, Ahmed Razzaq, The Islamic Impact on Jewish Religious Thought, Dar Al-Turath, Cairo, 1984 AD.

Qasim, Qasim Abduh, The People of Dhimmah in Egypt from the Islamic Conquest until the End of the Mamluks, Ain for Human and Social Studies and Research, Cairo, 2003 AD.

Steinsaltz, Adin, Introduction to the Talmud, translated by: Venita Bochevia Al-Sheikh, Dar Al-Farqad for Printing and Publishing, Damascus, 2006 AD.

Stillman, Yedida Kalfon, Femal Atiter of Medieval Egypt: According to The Trousseau Lists And Cognate Material From The Cairo Geniza, University of Pennsylvania, 1972.

Magazines:

Ali, Jassim Sakban, Bourgeois Hegemony under Fatimid Rule, Journal of the College of Education for Girls, Volume 27, 2016 AD.

Lewis, Balqis Idan, Women according to Al-Sakhawi in his book “The Bright Light of the People of the Ninth Century,” a study in social life, Journal of the College of Education for Girls, Volume 25, 2014 AD.

Downloads

Published

2024-03-24

Issue

Section

historiography

How to Cite

The role of Jewish women in economic activity in Egypt during the 5th century AH/11AD. (2024). Journal of Studies in History and Archeology, 90, 433-448. https://jcoart.uobaghdad.edu.iq/index.php/2075-3047/article/view/869

Similar Articles

41-50 of 202

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.