Wuhsha al-dallala
Wuhsha al-dallala was a Jewish-Egyptian businesswoman and pawnbroker active in Fustat. Her existence is attested solely by a series of documents preserved in the Cairo Geniza, she is thus the only woman whose biography could be comprehensively reconstructed from these records.
Wuhsha belonged to a banking family of moderate wealth and was briefly married to Arye ben Judah, a destitute Sicilian immigrant, resulting in the birth of a daughter. Choosing not to remarry after her divorce, Wuhsha later formed a relationship with Hassun of Ashkelon, with whom she had a son, Abu Sad. The unconventional birth of Abu Saʽd brought social repercussions, including Wuhsha’s expulsion from her synagogue during Yom Kippur. However, she was not completely ostracised and maintained her career, amassing a fortune of at least 700 .
Her will, penned by her friend, the cantor Hillel ben Eli, provides the most insight into her life, outlining her funeral arrangements in detail, from her burial attire to payments for pallbearers, alongside generous charitable bequests and the distribution of her estate among her son and relatives. Long after her death, court documents would continue to identify individuals as “al-Wuhsha’s relative.” Her expressions of independence and defiance of societal norms, uncharacteristic for the time, have established her among historians as exemplary of female individuality in the Cairo Geniza.
Name and sources
The life of Wuhsha al-dallala is documented solely through the Cairo Geniza, a vast collection of Jewish-Egyptian manuscripts spanning the 6th to 19th centuries. Five primary documents revolve around her life and she appears minutely in other texts, making her the only woman from the Geniza whose biography can be substantially reconstructed. Her existence was first noted by German-Jewish historian Shelomo Dov Goitein in 1964, through a document dated April 1098 that criticised her absence in the court despite a summons. Goitein later identified her will, drafted by the renowned clerk Hillel ben Eli.A record of the rabbinical court in Old Cairo from 1097/8, gives her full name as 'Karima bint Ammar, known as Wuhsha al-dallala'. The honorific Wuhsha al-dallala derives from the Arabic root and can be vocalised in two ways: and. Goitein interpreted as a term of endearment, translating it as 'one without whom one feels lonely' or 'object of yearning'. Conversely, Mordechai Friedman, scholar of Jewish history, suggested that could denote "loneliness," "estrangement," "coldness," or "untamed," favouring the latter as most likely. The title signifies her profession as a pawnbroker.
Reconstructed biography
Personal relations
In a record of charity contributors, Wuhsha is listed immediately before Ammar, the son of, who is later identified in a 1093 document as Amram, son of Ezra, the. Amram, likely her father, was a prominent banker in Alexandria. He had five children, three daughters and two sons and the family lived in Fustat, a previous capital of Egypt before the construction of Cairo. He was recorded as deceased by June 1104.The earliest documentation of Wuhsha al-dallala in the Cairo Geniza is her marriage contract with Arye ben Judah, a destitute Sicilian immigrant. The document lists her dowry at 316, a figure Goitein deemed inflated upon reviewing the listed items, estimating a more accurate value of 150. Goitein concludes that Wuhsha's family maintained a comfortable yet modest financial standing, considering the fact that they were responsible for providing for three daughters. Arye himself only offered a marriage gift of 10, with an additional 15 promised in deferred payments. The date of the marriage is unknown, but Jewish historian Renée Levine Melammed suggests it occurred after Wuhsha’s family relocated to Fustat. While the rationale for this union is unclear, Goitein hypothesised that exceptional circumstances, possibly Wuhsha’s reputation for independence, may have influenced the arrangement.
The marriage was short-lived, and within a few years, Wuhsha is described in another document as Arye’s divorcée. Historians Miriam Frenkel, Delia Cortese, and Simonetta Calderini date the official end of the marriage to January 1095. However, Goitein considered the date to pertain to a second failed marriage of Arye. From Arye, Wuhsha had a daughter named Sitt Ghazal, whose name is absent from Wuhsha’s will. Sitt Ghazal appears in a document dated December 1132, which records her acquisition of half a house. In this document, the presiding judge prominently identified her as “Bint al-Wuhsha” in bold script, since this was the name by which she was commonly known.
After separating from Arye, Wuhsha did not remarry. A short time after her divorce, she gave birth to a son, Abu Sad, whose father was her lover, Hasun, a refugee of Ashkelon. Contemporary records do not mention Hasun’s name, and the birth of Abu Sad was described as irregular. As a result of this, the president of the Iraqi synagogue publicly humiliated her by expelling her from the synagogue during Yom Kippur. Concerned that her son might be excluded from the Jewish community, and thereby prevented from contracting a lawful Jewish marriage, Wuhsha arranged circumstances that enabled witnesses to confirm the paternity of Abu Sad.
Wuhsha's ruse is described in a Jewish court document, conducted after her death and pertaining to an adult Abu Sad’s efforts to affirm that his birth resulted from an irregular but non-incestuous relationship. According to the testimony of Hillel ben Eli, a trusted confidant of Wuhsha and the scribe responsible for drafting both her marriage contract and her will, she disclosed to him that she was pregnant with Hasun’s child. She further confided that, although she and Hasun had formalised their union before a Muslim notary, she was afraid that Hasun might deny paternity. Hillel counselled her to orchestrate a scenario in which witnesses could verify her relationship with Hasun, advising her to 'gather some people, and let them surprise you with him so that your assertion might be confirmed'. Therefore she had two neighbours surprise Hasun while in intimate proximity with her, thus confirming that her future child was conceived from him.
Several documents from the early twelfth century mention relatives of Wuhsha. For instance, in July 1150, a woman identified as “the daughter of the daughter of al-Wuhsha” arranged for repairs to her residence in Cairo. Other cases include documents from 1133 and 1148, wherein individuals are identified by their connection to her as "al-Wuhsha's relative" or "al-Wuhsha's sister's son".
Business endeavours
Wuhsha’s will indicates that she possessed a minimum of 700. She participated in significant commercial enterprises, collaborating with her brother, Abu Nasr, an India trader, as well as other merchants, both male and female. Her primary economic pursuit, however, was pawnbroking, providing loans against collateral. Her professional success notably increased following her divorce from Arye. According to Goitein, Wuhsha’s affluent wealth was remarkable for her time, as most female pawnbrokers in her era were impoverished.In the summer of 1101, Abu Nasr was murdered at the port of Aydhab while returning from a trading venture in India, undertaken in collaboration with two other merchants, Farah—who was also killed—and Joseph al-Lebdi, a trader from Tripoli. Subsequently, Wuhsha and Lebdi came to a dispute over the fate of Abu Nasr's investment in Lebdi's goods and the matter was the subject of a legal proceeding in Fustat, dated 30 June 1104. Represented by Moshe ben Yeshua, Wuhsha demanded a share of 300 from the goods already sold, itself part of a total investment valued at 800 initially made by Abu Nasr. Lebdi argued that the 300 were unrelated to the partnership but expressed willingness to account for them if Wuhsha would similarly include 22 bales of lac, which her representative asserted were part of a distinct transaction and not the partnership involving 800.
Neither party could substantiate their claims with evidence. The case was overseen by two jurisconsults, known as the Judge and the, who held conflicting views, with the Judge favouring Lebdi and the supporting Wuhsha. Initially, the Judge ruled in Lebdi’s favor, prompting criticism from the. This disagreement escalated into a prolonged literary dispute marked by continuous rebuttals and critiques. Consequently, the case evolved into an extended and complex litigation that engaged the Fustat court for several years.
Wuhsha's will
According to Goitien, Wuhsha’s will stands out as the most detailed source of information regarding her circumstances. Drafted in Arabic by Hillel ben Eli at the close of the eleventh century and, according to Frenkel, shortly after Abu Sad's birth, the will meticulously outlines the distribution of her substantial assets. These included 300 “in gold” and kept by her at home, 67 on deposit, and the rest in loan collaterals. Wuhsha allocated significant sums for charitable purposes, including twenty-five for the cemetery, twenty-five for synagogue maintenance, and twenty for the impoverished of Fustat. Among these donations was a sum designated for the same synagogue that expelled her on Yom Kippur—perhaps a sign of having the final say, as it is unlikely that her donation would have been rejected. Cohen posits that these lavish donations were intended as acts of atonement, while Goitein considers them a demonstration of Wuhsha's display of prominence and virtue to other members of the community. Additionally, Wuhsha carefully specified her funeral arrangements, designating funds for each element of her burial attire—comprising a shroud, cloak, cap, hood, kerchief, veil, cover, and coffin—as well as compensation for the pallbearers, whom she noted would “walk a great distance."For Abu Sad, Wuhsha left her estate along with provisions for his religious education. She appointed an acquaintance specilised in the Bible to reside in her estate and instruct Abu Sad in the Bible and prayer book, however, she also sat a limit to the extent of his tuition to prevent her son from 'becoming a scholar'. Among her siblings, Wuhsha allocated 100 to her surviving brother, while 50 were given to her sister, Sibah and 10 others to another sister. Goitein suggests this distribution reflects the influence of the surrounding Muslim culture, where a female’s inheritance was typically half that of a male. Furthermore, Wuhsha provided luxurious gifts for her relatives, including funds to support her sister’s bridal attire and granting her bed to a cousin. Yet, she excluded her daughter, Sitt Ghazal, from the will, possibly due to estrangement following Ghazal’s marriage, which led to her disinheritance. Finally, she wrote of Hassun: "not one penny should be given", but she cancelled his considerable debt of 80 to her, returning two promissory notes to him along with a gift of 10.
The extensive will concludes with a statement that three documents in Arabic, outlining al-Wuhsha’s assets, liabilities, and the corresponding actions to be taken, were dictated and authorised by her.
Legacy
According to Goitein, Wuhsha’s life stands out as a notable example of female individuality within the Cairo Geniza documents. Despite her flourishing career as a pawnbroker and merchant, Wuhsha remained an outsider in the community's social fabric. As a foreigner in Fustat, Wuhsha associated herself with foreigners in her personal relations and deliberately operated outside the societal ethical norms; for instance, her conscious choice to remain unmarried after her divorce and engaging in an affair that resulted in an heir. She was also assertive in delegating herself as her brother's heir upon his death, challenging the Jewish inheritance law that granted exclusive rights to her surviving brother as the inheritor.Melammed describes the community’s perception of Wuhsha as 'complex'; although she faced expulsion from the synagogue, this did not equate to full excommunication or social ostracism. She sustained meaningful connections with influential synagogue members, and used these relationships for support. On the other hand, the birth of a son out of wedlock showcased that Wuhsha's surrounding society was heavily mindful of a child's legal paternity, contrary to the rullings of the Medieval Rabbinite law.