Joseph Rabban


Joseph Rabban was a prominent Jewish merchant and aristocrat in the entrepôt of Kodungallur on the Malabar Coast, India in early 11th century AD.

Career

On the Malabar Coast

According to the Jewish copper plates of Cochin, a charter issued by the Chera king in c. 1000 AD, Rabban was granted with several exclusive commercial rights and aristocratic privileges.
He was notably invested with the rights of merchant guild anjuman/hanjamana. Anjuman was a major merchant guild operating in south India at the time. He was also exempted from all payments made by other settlers in the city of Muyirikode to the Chera king. These rights and privileges were given in perpetuity to all his descendants.

Commercial Rights

  • Rights of the Anjuman Guild
  • The Anjuman Dues
  • Remission of Duty and Weighing Fee
  • Tolls by the Carts
  • Exemption from payments made by other settlers in Muyirikode to the Chera.
  • All the rights of the other settlers in Muyirikode.

    Aristocratic Privileges (the Seventy Two Privileges)

  • Rights to employ the day lamp, decorative cloth, palanquin, umbrella, kettledrum, and trumpet.
  • Rights to construct gateway, arch, and arched roof.
  • Right to employ weapons.
  • And the other Seventy Two Privileges.

    Legacy

Rabban's descendants continued to have prominence over other Jews of the Malabar coast for centuries. A conflict broke out between descendants, Joseph Azar, and his brother Aaron Azar, in the 1340s.