Coming of Age in Medieval Egypt: Female Adolescence, Jewish Law, and Ordinary Culture

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Much of what we know about life in the medieval Islamic Middle East comes from texts written to impart religious ideals or to chronicle the movements of great men. How did women participate in the societies these texts describe? What about non-Muslims, whose own religious traditions descended partly from pre-Islamic late antiquity?

Coming of Age in Medieval Egypt approaches these questions through Jewish women’s adolescence in Fatimid and Ayyubid Egypt and Syria (c. 969–1250). Using hundreds of everyday papers preserved in the Cairo Geniza, Eve Krakowski follows the lives of girls from different social classes―rich and poor, secluded and physically mobile―as they prepared to marry and become social adults. She argues that the families on whom these girls depended were more varied, fragmented, and fluid than has been thought. Krakowski also suggests a new approach to religious identity in premodern Islamic societies―and to the history of rabbinic Judaism. Through the lens of women’s coming-of-age, she demonstrates that even Jews who faithfully observed rabbinic law did not always understand the world in rabbinic terms. By tracing the fault lines between rabbinic legal practice and its practitioners’ lives, Krakowski explains how rabbinic Judaism adapted to the Islamic Middle Ages.

Coming of Age in Medieval Egypt offers a new way to understand how women took part in premodern Middle Eastern societies, and how families and religious law worked in the medieval Islamic world.

Author(s): Eve Krakowski
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Year: 2017

Language: English
Pages: 360
City: Princeton

Cover
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Technical Notes
Abbreviations
INTRODUCTION
PART I WOMEN IN A PATRONAGE CULTURE
CHAPTER 1 The Family
CHAPTER 2 The Courts and the Law
PART II UNMARRIED DAUGHTERS
CHAPTER 3 A Ripened Fig: Age at First Marriage
CHAPTER 4 The Economics of Female Adolescence
CHAPTER 5 A Virgin in Her Father’s House: Modesty, Mobility, and Social Control
PART III BECOMING A WIFE
CHAPTER 6 Marriage Choices
CHAPTER 7 Defining Marriage: Legal Agreements and Their Uses
CHAPTER 8 In the Marital Household
CONCLUSION
Bibliography
Index of Geniza Documents Cited
Index of Jewish and Islamic Texts Cited
General Index